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The Premiership side rested Courtney Lawes, Tom Wood, Luther Burrell and Louis Picamoles for the trip to Dublin. European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR) officials will routinely examine all team selections before deciding whether Northampton have a case to answer. EPCR will make a decision on whether to investigate the Saints on Monday. That is the same day Northampton are expected to find out whether they face sanction over the handling of George North's head injury in the recent Premiership match with Leicester. TV replays appeared to show North lying motionless after a fall, but he returned to play after passing a pitch-side assessment. Leinster moved Saturday's Pool 2 encounter from their usual home at the Royal Dublin Showground (RDS) to Lansdowne Road in anticipation of a big crowd and a competitive match. The Irish side scored nine tries as they inflicted a record European defeat on the Saints. Northampton's 10 changes included hooker Charlie Clare's inclusion in place of Dylan Hartley, who was suspended for six weeks for his swinging-arm tackle on Ireland flanker Sean O'Brien last weekend. Saints face Sale Sharks in the Premiership on Friday.
Northampton may face an investigation by European Cup chiefs for fielding a weakened team in Saturday's 60-13 Champions Cup thrashing by Leinster.
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According to a company filing, Dorsey will also stay on as CEO of his own company Square, Inc. One of Twitter's directors, Peter Currie, also tweeted that the board's decision to appoint Dorsey was unanimous. Read more about the announcement Here, then, are 11 facts about Dorsey - in 140 characters or fewer. Click here to read the first tweet. Dorsey has been tweeting about the appointment himself. Click here to read his own thoughts about becoming CEO of Twitter for the second time. The Welsh government is more than halfway through a £4.6m five-year programme to immunise badgers in north Pembrokeshire. Infection rates have fallen across Wales, but Christianne Glossop said it was too early to say whether it has had "additional benefit". Dr Glossop was speaking ahead of a worldwide conference on TB control. It will be held in Cardiff on Monday. "The programme is for five years," she told BBC's Sunday Politics Wales. "We've completed two years and we're now well into year three, and so the results are by no means available yet." TB infection rates fell across Wales over the last 12 months, she said. "The reduction in north Pembrokeshire is in line with the national reduction, so right now, we have no evidence that the vaccination programme in badgers is delivering an additional benefit - and we wouldn't expect to see any evidence at this stage either," she said. In 2012 and 2013, 2,776 badgers were trapped and vaccinated in the Intensive Action Area (IAA), which also takes in parts of Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire, at a cost of more than £1.8m. But Dr Glossop said that the wider TB eradication programme cost £28m last year alone, most of which was spent on testing cattle, biosecurity and compensating farmers. "You've always got to have the balance here between all the different elements of the programme, making sure that you're tackling all sources of infection," she said. The vaccination programme was announced by Labour ministers in 2012 when they abandoned the previous coalition government's intention to cull badgers in the IAA.
Jack Dorsey has been voted in as the permanent chief executive of Twitter by the firm's board. [NEXT_CONCEPT] It is unclear whether vaccinating badgers in west Wales has cut TB in cattle, the chief vet has said.
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Mahmudur Rohman, 46, of Rothbart Way, Peterborough and Kamal Rahman, 54, of Derby Drive, Peterborough sold the meat to butchers and restaurants. The 21-month deception was uncovered by Leicester council's trading standards. Rohman and Rahman were convicted at Leicester Crown Court. They will be sentenced on 11 April. The investigation began after the Leicestershire Food Safety team started a programme of testing in 2013, in the wake of the horsemeat scandal. This revealed meat being supplied to businesses as lamb was in fact turkey. Leicester City Council's trading standards traced the "lamb" to Peterborough-based Dutch Bangla Ltd, whose director was Mahmudar Rohman. The meat was being sold to butchers, wholesalers and restaurants in and around Leicestershire and as far as Middlesbrough and Portsmouth. Trading standards officers also seized a forged certificate which said the meat had been certified as halal - meaning it had been slaughtered according to Islamic ritual and was suitable for consumption by Muslims. They estimated Dutch Bangla Ltd made a profit of between £300,000 and £400,000 between January 2013 and October 2014. Rohman was also found guilty of three counts of selling food not of the nature, quality and substance demanded, three counts of giving or displaying food exposed for sale but labelled wrongly, and making a false instrument and possessing an article used in fraud. Rahman was also found guilty of perverting the course of justice. Mohammed Anwarul Hoque, 56, and Mohammed Zunaid Hoque, 35, both of Uplands Road in Leicester, were cleared of fraud.
Two men who supplied over 100 tonnes of turkey mince they claimed was halal lamb have been found guilty of conspiracy to commit fraud.
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Cornwall Fire and Rescue said the fire at St Erth, near Hayle in Cornwall, started at about 20:15 BST on Monday and more than 70 firefighters were called to fight it. Ruptured fuel tanks have caused the fire to spread with another bursting on Wednesday morning, firefighters said. The yard owners said safety checks were completed the night the fire started. Click here for more updates on the fire and other stories "We are devastated for our employees who have worked so loyally for us for over 12 years and devastated to have lost not only our livelihood but many personal effects," owners Kathy and Mark Bailey said on their Facebook page. They said these included items that once belonged to Ms Bailey's dead parents, diaries dating back to 1884, photo albums spanning 90 years and a vintage car. The pair thanked the emergency services and sent their thoughts to the residents of St Erth who "bore the brunt of the smoke". Nobody has been seriously injured by the fire. Great Western Railway said lines through St Erth station would be closed for a second day on Wednesday because the fire had spread. Harry Hodgson, who was on a train which pulled into St Erth station on Monday, said the "huge black smog" could be seen from a mile away. "It just erupted and basically took a huge building out within minutes and all of a sudden it was just an uncontrollable inferno, a massive blaze", he said. Mr Hodgson said "the general mood was excitement" because no one had been injured and people were "enjoying the power and the beauty of the fire". People living in the area have been advised to close windows and remain indoors owing to the large plumes of thick, black smoke.
A fire that broke out at a recycling centre has continued to blaze into its third day.
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The future of the festival had been in doubt following two blasts at Zaventem airport and Maalbeek metro station. But BIFFF has now tweeted: "Let horror only be on screen! The festival will take place starting next week." The festival will open on 29 March as planned with a screening of Lily James and Sam Riley comedy horror Pride And Prejudice And Zombies. BIFFF's main venue, the Bozar Centre For Fine Arts, is close to Brussels' main train station and 20 minutes walk from Maalbeek station. The centre also posted a message on its website featuring the Belgian flag saying: "Bozar, as an arts centre that is open to everyone, attaches great importance to its fundamental values, that's why we are open since this morning. A big welcome." Speaking before the announcement, BIFFF festival director Guy Delmote told Screen Daily if the festival had to be cancelled this year it would face an uncertain future. "It could be the end of the festival, if we stop," he said. "If it doesn't happen this year it is going to be hard, [given] all the money we've spent already." A number of cinemas and cultural buildings were closed on Tuesday after the attacks as the city went into lockdown. The Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium remained closed on Wednesday, as was the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences and the Royal Museums for Art and History. The Comic Museum is one of those that is open.
Brussels' International Fantastic Film Festival (BIFFF) is to go ahead despite Tuesday's terror attacks.
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MP Philip Hollobone invited the actress to the town to make up for her tweeting "#REMAIN Sorry, but #KETTERING where are you" during the count. The US actress, who backed Remain in the referendum, has since tweeted that she would be happy to attend. Mr Hollobone, who backed the Leave campaign, said it was "fantastic news". Speaking in the House of Commons Conservative MP Mr Hollobone said her tweet implied that she had never heard of Kettering and said it also implied that no-one had heard of the town - before listing the town's accolades. He added that by turning the lights on she would redeem her political reputation. Read more on this story and other Northamptonshire news Miss Lohan replied: "Direct message me about your offer. Would be happy to light the Christmas tree in #Kettering." In response to the tweet Mr Hollobone said: "Let's hope she means it. If she wants to come to Kettering and turn the lights on she would be made very welcome." Miss Lohan emerged as an unlikely EU referendum pundit on results night with a series of social media posts in which she has pleaded with Britain not to leave the European Union.
Lindsay Lohan has agreed to turn on the Christmas lights in Kettering this year following an "offensive" tweet about the town on EU referendum night.
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It took place at the Irish National War Memorial Gardens at Islandbridge. Dublin Lord Mayor Críona Ní Dhálaigh laid a laurel wreath in tribute to the dead of Word War One and World War Two. Her Sinn Féin colleagues, Lord Mayor of Belfast Arder Carson and Speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly Mitchel McLaughlin, also attended the ceremony. The annual commemoration at Islandbridge, in the Dublin suburb of Kilmainham, is hosted by the Royal British Legion Republic of Ireland. Ms Ní Dhálaigh, who was elected to the new post last month, accepted an invitation to lay a wreath on behalf of the people of Dublin. Speaking after the commemoration, she said: "Today, we remember the many thousands of Irish people who died during these conflicts, including those from this city. "Sinn Féin has engaged with the Royal British Legion for many years now and as first citizen of the city of Dublin, I am here representing the whole city. "One of my key priorities as mayor was to incorporate the principle of inclusivity and my attendance here today, along with my Sinn Féin colleagues, speaks to this ideal."
The new Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Dublin has become the first elected member of the party to attend the Royal British Legion's war commemoration in the city.
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Colin Capp, 23, attacked Darren Thomas, 45, while he slept in their cell in March 2014, Cardiff Crown Court heard. Mr Thomas was found with a plastic bag around his head; his death was caused by strangulation, suffocation or both. Capp, from Scotland, admitted killing Mr Thomas but denied murder on the grounds of diminished responsibility. The court had heard Mr Thomas had just started a 12-week sentence at HMP Cardiff for breaching an Asbo banning him from entering Cardiff city centre. He was put in a cell with Capp - an arsonist who had been recalled to prison after checking himself into a psychiatric ward saying he was thinking of starting more fires. During the trial, the defence said that Capp was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia. However a consultant psychiatrist, on behalf of the prosecution, believed Capp had a personality disorder rather than a mental illness and knew what he was doing when he killed his cellmate. Following the conviction, Mr Thomas's family said he died in a place where he should have been safe. "Darren was a much loved son, step-son and brother who met his death in horrible circumstances and who did not deserve to have his life taken away at such a young age," they said in a statement. Det Insp Ceri Hughes of South Wales Police, said: "With today's verdict I hope that Darren's family can now begin to move on in their lives in the knowledge that others will be protected from harm by the person responsible who has caused much anguish."
An inmate at Cardiff prison who stabbed his cellmate in the neck 100 times with a ballpoint pen has been found guilty of murder.
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Defending champions New England scored a touchdown with 12 seconds remaining but failed with a two-point conversion that would have levelled the scores. Media playback is not supported on this device Quarterback Cam Newton led Carolina to a 49-15 win over the Arizona Cardinals in the NFC Championship game. The Super Bowl takes place in San Francisco on 7 February. Denver quarterback Peyton Manning, criticised all season after struggling with poor form and injury, has a chance to win his second Super Bowl title. And at 39, he will be the oldest quarterback to play in the NFL's showpiece event. Broncos legend John Elway was the previous oldest, appearing in the 1999 victory over the Atlanta Falcons at the age of 38. "To be going to our second Super Bowl in four years is very special and just an awesome effort," said Manning, who is 40 in March. Manning, who has thrown the most touchdowns in NFL history, managed just nine touchdown passes in the regular season. But he threw two first-half scores to Owen Daniels to put the Broncos 17-9 ahead at their Mile High Stadium. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady struggled against Denver's superb defence, throwing two interceptions in the first half, but rallied late on to throw a touchdown to Rob Gronkowski inside the final few seconds. That made the score 20-18, but Denver defended the two-point conversion attempt to see out the win. New England kicker Stephen Gostkowski's remarkable run of 523 consecutive kicks came to an end when he missed his extra point after Steven Jackson's touchdown. Carolina scored the first three times they touched the ball to lead the Cardinals 24-7 at half-time. Star quarterback Newton finished with 335 yards passing and 47 rushing, as the team set a scoring record for an NFC final. "Oh, wow, playing 'The Sheriff'," 26-year-old Newton said of the prospect of going head-to-head with Manning. Media playback is not supported on this device "We're going to live in the moment right now. We're going to be excited. "We came out here and fought our tails off and did what a lot of people said we couldn't do. It's not over yet. We'll be ready to go in two weeks." Newton, expected to be named the league's most valuable player, has run or thrown for 50 touchdowns this season. The Panthers lost the 2004 Super Bowl 32-29 to the Patriots. Cardinals quarterback Carson Palmer described his mood after the defeat as "about as bad as you can feel". "Carolina jumped out early and got on top of us," he said. "We dug ourselves a hole and never came close to coming out of it." Palmer surrendered six of seven turnovers, including four interceptions. "Staring over at their sideline and seeing that feeling the other team has is something that's probably going to stick with me for the rest of my life," he said. The Cardinals reached their only Super Bowl in 2009, losing 27-23 to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Denver Broncos beat the New England Patriots 20-18 in a dramatic AFC Championship game and will face the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50.
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Meschede, 24, has targeted a place in the second-string England Lions team since joining Glamorgan from Somerset. But Derrick feels the South Africa-born player, who was on loan with the Welsh county in 2015, can aim higher. "He could be the next guy from Glamorgan that actually plays for England in any sort of cricket. I liked what I saw last year," said Derrick. Meschede played in all but one of Glamorgan's matches while on loan last season, across all three formats, scoring 655 runs in first-class cricket and claiming 43 wickets. He hit the headlines by claiming the wicket of Kevin Pietersen on the former England batsman's county comeback. But Derrick, who left as Glamorgan coach in November, 2006, believes the Welsh county did not make the most of Meschede's talents. Fast bowler Simon Jones was Glamorgan's last England player, memorably helping them to win the 2005 Ashes series against Australia. But Alex Wharf was the last Glamorgan player to play international limited-overs cricket and Derrick sees Meschede as filling a similar role for England. "Glamorgan started a couple of games with him opening up in T20 stuff," said Derrick. "But I would have persevered with that and I think looking back to someone like when Wharfy got into that England side and he batted at three and bowled a heavy ball. "And someone like Meschede can probably look to follow that. "So I think that's a very, very good signing for Glamorgan and if I was a betting man I think he would be the one I would be looking at to push on for England honours in the next couple of years." Police said the first woman was found seriously injured at a house on Mapleton Crescent in Redcar at about 20:45 GMT on Wednesday. A short time later officers received reports that a second woman was being attacked in nearby Byland Close. Both women subsequently died, said a spokesman for Cleveland Police who have now arrested a 34-year-old man on suspicion of two counts of murder.
Former Glamorgan coach John Derrick has tipped all-rounder Craig Meschede to be the county's next England player. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two women have been killed in separate attacks on Teesside.
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Pte James, from Llangollen in Denbighshire, was one of four recruits to die from bullet wounds at the army base between 1995 and 2002. Pte Helen Miller said she had been pressured by a senior officer 20 years ago to say her friend was happy. She said all leave had been cancelled at the Surrey base after her death. She said she had been told by an unnamed sergeant major at the time to "behave myself, to stop being hysterical. I was told a couple of times 'you wont go to the funeral if you carry on'. "I think they were trying to keep us quiet. It was damage limitation." she said. John Beggs, representing Surrey Police, asked Pte Miller about a statement she had made in 2002 in which she said she always thought Pte James had killed herself. Pte Miller told the inquest: "Now, whether I believe it, I have no idea about what happened to her on that day." Giving evidence from abroad via video link, she said: "I find it very strange that she would open up to me and then out of nowhere, kill herself, without talking about it and without getting upset." On Thursday, the hearing was told Pte James had been in relationships with two male recruits at the barracks. "She had found herself in a situation where she didn't want to finish with one of them", WO1 Sarah Ditchfield said. Peter Mant, representing Pte James's family, asked Pte Miller if relationship problems could have caused her friend to take her own life. She said: "No. Everyone had boyfriend trouble". It was not something that was causing her "great upset", but was more "indecisiveness", she told the hearing. Pte Miller said: "I think it was a struggle for her at Deepcut." She told the inquest recruits had talked about the death of Pte Sean Benton from Hastings who was found with five gunshot wounds in June 1995. They discussed how they would kill themselves, if they were to do it. Pte Miller said: "It was the general consensus to shoot yourself [in the head] would be the easiest way to do it. "Cheryl was part of that conversation. It was a conversation many were having, not Cheryl alone." An initial inquest into Pte James's death in 1995 recorded an open verdict but that was overturned by the High Court, which ordered the new hearing. The inquest continues. Who were the Deepcut four? Background to the deaths and timeline of events Alan Charlton, 56, of Bridgwater, Somerset, and Idris Ali, 51, of Cardiff, were jailed in 1991 over the death of Karen Price. At a brief hearing at London's Court of Appeal on Tuesday, judges dismissed their appeal. Karen's body was found on Fitzhamon Embankment, Cardiff, in November 1989. Charlton was jailed for life in 1991 for murder while Ali was freed in 1994 after his conviction was quashed and he admitted manslaughter. Karen went missing from a children's home in 1981 and when her body was found, it was so badly decomposed it was impossible to establish the cause of her death. Lawyers for the men argued during their appeal that evidence from the key witness in the trial - a girl from the same children's home as Karen who was known only as D - could not be relied upon. It was this testimony which implicated the men in Karen's killing. Ali claims he only confessed to manslaughter in order to get out of prison. Charlton's representatives claimed police officers involved in the investigation pressurised key trial witnesses. Some also worked on the 1988 murder of Cardiff prostitute Lynette White, which later triggered an investigation into alleged police corruption. Lawyers argued if that was known at the time of their prosecution, the evidence from D would have been excluded or viewed differently by the jury.
A friend of Pte Cheryl James who died at Deepcut barracks has told an inquest "they were trying to keep us quiet" after her death. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two men who killed a 15-year-old-girl whose body was found wrapped in a carpet have failed in an appeal against their convictions.
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Mytholmroyd suffered severe flooding in December 2015 and it is hoped the new project will protect 400 properties. The Environment Agency (EA) is buying 10 homes, which will be demolished to allow the widening of the River Calder's channel. Therese Coffey MP said she expected design options to be finalised "by the end of June". Survey work found the main cause of Mytholmroyd's river flooding was narrow sections and low bridges. The EA plans to replace bridges and raise flood walls. Construction work is expected to last two years with homes and businesses near Caldene Bridge purchased for "fair market rates". Adrian Gill, of the EA, said: "Some houses were damaged beyond repair by the 2015 floods but all were purchased by agreement with the owners. "For many involved it was a very difficult decision but overall this is the right thing to do for Mytholmroyd." Some have already been demolished, including 13 Calder Grove where Callum Marsden's grandparents lived for 57 years. Mr Marsden said: "I don't think it is necessary to knock houses down to widen the river." "I hope this work [demolition of the houses] is worth it", he added. His grandparents, who are in their 80s, have moved into a new home. Barry Greenwood, of the Upper Calder Valley Flood Protection group, said he was happy to see work to clear silt and shale from the river, although the problems had first been raised in 2012. The village is at the confluence of the Calder River and a brook.
The floods minister has visited a West Yorkshire village to see design options for a £15m flood alleviation scheme.
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George Allen, 36, was hit as he picked his son and daughter up from school in Lisburn last week. He remains in a critical condition in hospital but is now "the most stable he has been" since the incident. His son Geordie, five, and daughter Georgia, seven, were also injured but have been released from hospital. The incident happened at Killowen Primary School in Lisburn. In a statement, Mr Allen's wife, Sharon, and her family said the aftermath of the "tragic, freak accident" had been "devastating for us all". "George was not on his phone at the time of the lightning strike, he does not have any metal plates and he was not holding an umbrella," the family said. "A hard-working man going to collect his two children from school would not have expected this to happen. "Had it not been for the fast actions of those at Killowen that day, the outcome would have been tragic." School staff and parents used a defibrillator on Mr Allen and his son. The children are "both home and doing well", the family said. "Through this difficult time the fact that the children have come through as they have is a blessing." The family also thanked staff at the hospitals Mr Allen and his children had been treated in "for their fantastic efforts and continued care".
A man who was left critically ill after being struck by lightning in County Antrim has "has fought hard and continues to fight", his wife has said.
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The 24-year-old, who went on loan to Rotherham this term after injury, has played eight times since his return. "We've got a (12-month) option on him (in the summer) and clearly I'm going to take that up," said McCarthy. "We are in negotiations with him about a new contract. Whether he's happy with what we've offered him I don't know - Marcus (Evans) is dealing with it." Hyam, who has made 105 league appearances for Ipswich, played in Tuesday's 2-1 victory over Reading which lifted Town into the Championship play-offs, with Brett Pitman's 89th-minute winner securing the Portman Road win. "We worked unbelievably hard and scrapped and fought for everything," McCarthy told BBC Radio Suffolk of his side's performance. "That was one of our hardest games all season, physically. We didn't play particularly well but we were playing against a really good team full of quality Championship players. "All the things I talk about, resilience, determination and endurance, that is sometimes much maligned because people and I want sexy football - but it's not always a league you can do it in. "As I've found over my 24 years doing it, you tend to get more out of it with all those physical, tough qualities than you do with just wanting to be a nice football team." It is understood the incident happened at Hermitage Academy in Helensburgh on Monday and involved two teenagers, aged 13 and 15, with a ball-bearing gun. Police Scotland said the teacher was not seriously injured and that inquiries were ongoing. A spokeswoman for Argyll and Bute Council said "appropriate disciplinary action" had been taken against those involved. A Police Scotland spokeswoman said: "Police were made aware of an incident involving a BB gun being discharged at a teacher within a school in Helensburgh on Monday. "The teacher was not seriously injured and inquiries are ongoing to establish the circumstances surrounding the incident." The spokeswoman added that the two teenagers were the subject of a report to the early and effective interventions co-ordinator in connection with the incident. The school, which has about 1,350 pupils and 100 teachers, is one of two secondaries in the area. A spokeswoman for Argyll and Bute Council said: "An incident took place in the school on Monday. We have thoroughly investigated this and taken the appropriate disciplinary action against those involved. "We have hard working staff and pupils who are together achieving often award-winning success. Their well-being is paramount and we take any action required to ensure this." The Premiership club have re-signed the 31-year-old to provide cover, with Tom Cruse and George Edgson both injured. Shervington came out of retirement to join Bristol in October, but did not make a first-team appearance. The former Worcester Warriors, Ospreys and Leinster player was previously at Wasps for two seasons, making 32 appearances for the club between 2014 and his initial retirement in May.
Ipswich are in talks with midfielder Luke Hyam over a new contract, according to boss Mick McCarthy. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A teacher has been shot with an airgun at a school in Argyll and Bute. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Welsh hooker Edd Shervington has re-joined Wasps on a three-month contract.
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Remington Walden died after the Jeep he was travelling was struck from behind by a truck, which ruptured its rear fuel tank causing it to ignite. Chrysler will pay 99% of the sum and the driver of the other vehicle 1%. In 2013 Chrysler recalled 1.56 million Jeep SUVs built between 1993-98 with similar rear fuel tanks. The model Remington died in was built in 1999 and was therefore not among those recalled. Chrysler said that the 1999 model was not defective and dangerous. But jurors said the car giant was liable for the death and the company had failed to warn customers that the tank's position could increase the risk of a fire. The family claimed their son would have been better protected if the tank was placed further forward in the car.
A US jury has awarded $150m (£100m) to the family of a four-year old boy that died in a crash involving a Jeep Grand Cherokee in 2012.
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The community sports facility in the city centre offers free sessions, including football, hockey and tennis, and is accessible 24 hours a day. There are almost 200 courts around the world, named after Dutch footballer Johan Cruyff, who died last year. Aberdeen-born Denis Law will also receive an honorary degree at Robert Gordon University later. Law starred for Manchester United and Scotland and was named European footballer of the year in 1964. Aberdeen City Council joined forces with the Denis Law Legacy Trust and the Cruyff Foundation for the project. The all-weather court on Catherine Street cost about £250,000.
Football legend Denis Law has opened Scotland's first Cruyff Court in Aberdeen.
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Raheemullah Oryakhel, 14, is believed to have been struck and killed by a car after falling off a lorry in Calais. The news comes as the UK's anti-slavery commissioner called on the government to do more to identify migrant children in Calais entitled to come to Britain. Kevin Hyland said it was unacceptable that unaccompanied children "risked their lives daily" to reach Britain. Mr Hyland said migrants had very little confidence in the official system for reuniting them with their families in the UK. In a letter to Home Secretary Amber Rudd, Mr Hyland said it was "absolutely unacceptable" that children continue to put themselves in the hands of people traffickers and "risked their lives daily" to reach Britain. He said the government should increase its resources "for a sustained period" to quickly and proactively identify eligible children, so that they can be given the protection they are entitled to. Raheemullah, who was from Afghanistan, is believed to have been killed over the weekend. His cousin, also from Afghanistan, said he had spoken to him shortly before he died. "He said 'Well cousin, you know I'm going - do you want to go now?'," the cousin said. "I said 'No, I can't go - it's too late,' but he said he wanted to go now. "I said 'Ok, but I don't want to go'." "On Saturday we'd been to hospital, so we saw his dead body." Another relative from Birmingham, Abdul Walli, added: "His mum and dad, to save [his son's] life, send him to other countries, but they don't know they will receive his dead body back to Afghanistan. It's very sad." Laura Griffiths, a senior field manager at Safe Passage, which helps bring together child refugees in Calais and their families in the UK, said Raheemullah had a legal right to join his brother in Manchester. Under EU-wide regulation, asylum claims must be made in the first safe country a person reaches, but children can have their claim transferred to another country if they have family members living there. The Dubs Amendment to the Immigration Act, originally put forward by Lord Dubs, requires the government to arrange for the transfer to the UK and support of unaccompanied refugee children from Europe. Ms Griffiths said the charity estimated there were about 1,000 unaccompanied children living in the Calais migrant camp known as the Jungle, with 400 of them having been identified as having a legal right to be brought to the UK safely and legally. She said: "No more children should die trying to reach their family in the UK - they have a legal right to be there. "The British and French governments have a moral and legal responsibility to bring these children as quickly and safely as possible to their families." The Home Office said that more than 120 cases of unaccompanied children in Europe had been accepted for transfer to the UK this year because they had relatives here, and insisted that it had made "significant progress" in speeding up the process. Meanwhile, construction work has begun on a UK-funded wall near the Jungle migrant camp. Dubbed the "Great Wall of Calais" by some media, it is an attempt to prevent migrants from trying to stow away on trucks heading for Britain.
Relatives of an Afghan boy who died in Calais while trying to enter the UK have told the BBC of his last moments.
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The government told Southwark Council it had not done enough to protect Aylesbury Estate residents. Minister Sajid Javid found the orders breached the human rights of residents as they would not be able to afford to stay on the estate or live nearby. Southwark Council said they would seek a judicial review. It called on Mr Javid to reconsider his decision, claiming the report was based on a former leaseholder policy which had been updated in December 2015. Council leader Peter John said the government had "jeopardised plans for 800 new homes for Londoners" and pointed out each of the remaining resident leaseholders has been offered a new home in the same area, rent-free, and with a shared equity arrangement to protect money they had saved and invested. Homeowners on the estate told the BBC in recent weeks the council had priced their properties below market rates. Resident Beverley Robinson, who bought her flat more than 10 years ago, claims the council valued her property at £117,000. However, two independent valuers priced it at about £300,000. "You can't buy a home in London for under £140,000 which means I will have to start again - finding a mortgage - and at my age that's not an option. I will be turned down by the banks," she said. They would be forced to move away, with an impact on family life, the education of affected children and "dislocation from their cultural heritage" for some residents, the government said. Agnes Kabuto, who lives on the same estate, said the council had offered her £145,000 for her three-bedroom home while similar-sized properties in the area were going for about £385,000. The Aylesbury Estate in Elephant and Castle was the largest social housing estate in Europe, but it is to be demolished to make way for a £1.5bn regeneration scheme.
A compulsory purchase order to make residents of a London council estate sell their flats ahead of a regeneration scheme has been blocked.
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Tina and Mike Trowhill have campaigned for the inquiry for over a year, after discovering their son's ashes were scattered without their knowledge. Justice Secretary Michael Gove told Hull North MP Diana Johnson that Hull City Council had been asked to commission the inquiry. Ms Johnson said it was a "victory" for parents. The council said it would consider Mr Gove's request for a local inquiry, but said a national inquiry should be launched instead. An inquiry in Shropshire last June concluded that a national inspector should be created for crematoriums after parents were unable to receive their babies' ashes. In March, Scottish MPs agreed new regulations on burials and cremations. Hull City Council said: "We are very sensitive to the need to ensure that parents across the country do not have to deal with the upset and uncertainty of not knowing what has happened to their baby's ashes. "No decision has yet been made to hold a local enquiry but we will consider the Minister's request taking into account all the work undertaken locally with the hospital and funeral directors, the previous enquiries in Scotland and Shropshire and the recent national call for evidence, towards which we have contributed substantially. "Our position has always been that this is a national issue and that the best way to ensure that parents, at a time of great distress, have confidence in a consistent and caring process across all hospitals, funeral directors and crematoria in dealing with the ashes of their babies is for the government to develop and issue clear guidelines within a national Code of Practice, based on the findings of a national inquiry." MP Diana Johnson, who supported the Hull campaign, said: "This is a victory for Tina Trowhill and other parents in Hull and from around the country. "Only full independent scrutiny will give families confidence that the terrible errors of the past will not be repeated in the future." She said it was "regrettable" that the independent inquiry had only been announced after a year of campaigning. "I want the council to get on now and do the right thing and find out for the 100-odd families who have come forward to find out what happened to their babies' ashes," she said. The 19-year-old son of Rovers boss Mark Cooper has made three starts in five appearances in all competitions since originally signing on 9 December. That was just four days before ex-Birmingham boss Gary Rowett was sacked. But Rowett's successor Gianfranco Zola has allowed Cooper to remain in Gloucestershire to see out the season. Cooper also had a month on loan in Nailsworth last season, before moving earlier this season to York City, where he made five starts. Forest Green also have defender Aarran Racine and forward Rhys Murphy back at the club from their joint loan at York. Both scored once in their month at Bootham Crescent, Racine making five starts, while Murphy made six appearances.
An independent inquiry should be launched into infant cremations in Hull, the government has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Forest Green Rovers midfielder Charlie Cooper has extended his loan at The New Lawn from Championship side Birmingham City until the end of the season.
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The matter was raised during First Minister's Questions at Holyrood. Ms Davidson said health workers in Scotland were under pressure "like never before". Ms Sturgeon said it had always been a priority of health boards to "keep levels of sickness absence in the NHS to a minimum". She added that trade unions "work very hard with health boards" to try to support staff. Ms Davidson told the Holyrood chamber that her party had written to health boards across the country to ask how often staffing concerns had been formally raised by doctors and nurses, stating that the answer was "in their thousands". She said: "More patients are coming through the doors and the cracks are beginning to show in hospitals across the country. "This week the NHS workforce statistics were published and they uncovered staff sickness levels across Scotland at a seven-year high - worst affected is the Scottish Ambulance Service where more than 7% of staff are off at any one time, that is four times the average sickness rate outside the public sector. "It is clear that health workers are struggling to cope in an increasingly strained environment and the figures show that the problem is getting worse. What will the first minister do to help?" The politician challenged Ms Sturgeon to back her party's pledge to fund 1,000 more nurses and midwives by ending universal free prescriptions, and to promise to pass on extra health funding that arises as a result of UK government decisions. Ms Sturgeon said the latest statistics showed there were now 10,500 more NHS staff than when the SNP came to power. In Dumfries and Galloway, staffing is up 6.3% from September 2007, she added. Speaking in the chamber, Ms Sturgeon said: "We will continue to ensure record funding of our health service, we will continue to ensure our record staffing numbers in our health service, and it is because of that that we have a health service now that is delivering historically low waiting times. "Making sure that we keep levels of sickness absence in the NHS to a minimum has always been a key priority for health boards. Trade unions work very hard with health boards to try to support staff to do that. "I think perhaps the most important thing we have done as a government is to ensure that the number of people working in our health service to deal with the rising demand for health services, because of our ageing population, is increasing."
Scotland's Conservative Party leader Ruth Davidson has asked Nicola Sturgeon what she plans to do about a seven-year high in NHS staff sickness.
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The police helicopter was scrambled at about 11:20 BST after flight crews on two separate planes reported seeing the drone in the airspace. An investigation was carried out and Runway One closed for 20 minutes but nothing was found, police said. An airport spokesman said some flights experienced short delays but all operations have now resumed as normal. John Mayhew, general manager for air traffic services at Manchester Airport, said: "Flying drones in the close vicinity to any airport without permission is completely unacceptable, with the reported sighting causing delays to inbound and outbound traffic and the diversion of a small number aircraft to other airports. "The matter has now been referred to the police." Prof Stefan Katzenbeisser made the claim at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin. The professor said that the systems which switch trains from one line to another could be shut down if encryption keys went astray. He stressed that trains would not be in danger, but there could be delays. Train-switching systems have historically been controlled by proprietary analogue systems. At the end of the last century, more than 35 incompatible systems were used for railway communications across Europe. A group of manufacturers met to address this and decided to switch to a single digital standard to ensure they could source replacement parts and make different companies' systems interoperable. They developed GSM-Railway (GSM-R), a more secure version of the 2G wireless standard used by mobile phones. It allows traffic controllers and train drivers to talk to each other, and for data to be transmitted recording the vehicle's speed and location. When used with the European Train Control System, signallers can utilise the data to give the train permission to enter the next part of the track, theoretically making trackside signals unnecessary. The technology is already being used in parts of Europe, Africa and Asia. Network Rail is rolling it out in the UK and aims to cover all Britain's rail lines by the end of 2014. Prof Katzenbeisser believes the system is relatively secure from hackers under normal circumstances. However, the computer science expert from Technische Universitat Darmstadt warns that encryption keys, used to protect the communications, could pose risks. "The main problem I see is a process of changing... keys. This will be a big issue in the future, how to manages these keys safely," he told Reuters news agency at the conference. The news agency said the keys are downloaded to physical media such as USB sticks before being distributed for installation. It said the risk would occur if one of them fell into the wrong hands. This could allow hackers to mount a denial of service attack by overwhelming the signals system with traffic, forcing it to shut down. "Trains could not crash, but services could be disrupted for some time," the professor said. However, a spokesman for Network Rail played down the risk. "GSM-R is a robust and secure system and Network Rail does not comment in detail on security," PJ Taylor, head of national news at Network Rail, told the BBC.
Flights were diverted for a short time at Manchester Airport after a drone was spotted close to the flight path. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A shift to a mobile communications technology could expose rail networks to hackers, according to a security expert.
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The military has not made public the reason for Vice Admiral Mark Norman's suspension. Federal Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said in a short statement that he fully supported the decision to relieve Vice Adm Norman from carrying out his military duties. Vice Adm Norman was named to the post last August. He was removed from of his duties "effective immediately and until further notice", according to an order from Gen Jonathan Vance, Canada's chief of the defence staff, which is dated 13 January. Gen Vance is Canada's top soldier in uniform and commands the military. His letter did not offer any explanation for Vice Adm Norman's dismissal. A spokesman for the general said Vice Adm Norman has been removed "from the performance of military duty. For the time being, he will not be carrying out the functions of [vice chief of the defence staff]". He has been replaced on an interim basis by current navy commander Vice Admiral Ron Lloyd. Vice Adm Norman is a career naval officer who has spent over three decades in Canada's military, joining in 1980 as a navy reservist.
The second highest-ranking officer in the Canadian military has been temporarily relieved from his duties.
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He replaces Roberto Di Matteo, who was sacked on Wednesday following a 3-0 Champions League defeat by Juventus. Benitez, 52, becomes Chelsea's ninth manager since Roman Abramovich became owner in 2003. But his short-term appointment could pave the way for Abramovich to make a summer approach for ex-Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola. Rafael Benitez must not only satisfy the demands of an owner who seems beyond satisfaction after taking over as Chelsea manager, he must also uncover a way to win over a sceptical fanbase. To suggest that Benitez's arrival to succeed Roberto Di Matteo has not been received with universal acclaim by Chelsea's supporters is to offer up a masterpiece of understatement. A Chelsea statement said: "The owner and the board believe that in Benitez we have a manager with significant experience at the highest level of football, who can come in and immediately help deliver our objectives. "The two-time Uefa Manager of the Year comes with outstanding pedigree." Benitez joined Liverpool from Valencia in 2004 and won the Champions League in 2005, as well as reaching the final in 2007, before leaving Anfield by mutual consent in 2010. He has been out of work since he was sacked by Inter Milan in December 2010. He spent just six months in charge of the Serie A club despite winning two titles - the Club World Cup and Italian Super Cup. The Spaniard is due to meet the Chelsea players at the club's training ground in Cobham on Thursday. His first match in charge is Sunday's visit of Premier League leaders and reigning champions Manchester City. Before his appointment was confirmed, Benitez admitted his interest in the job to Abu Dhabi-based website Sport 360. "I am looking for a club that can challenge for trophies and Chelsea is one of these clubs," he said. When he was asked about the prospect of managing on a short-term basis, he added: "I am just trying to go to a team that can win. So we will find ways to have a challenge like this." Former Chelsea midfielder Nigel Spackman suggested Benitez's appointment would be unpopular with Blues fans. He told BBC Radio 5 live: "You won't find many Chelsea fans happy with an appointment of an ex-Liverpool manager. "Benitez has got a great CV and a good record, but the only way he will win the Stamford Bridge crowd over is getting the results. Now he had to focus on trying to win the Premier League. "He is the interim manager but if he does a good job maybe he will get it for longer." David Johnstone, spokesman for Chelsea fanzine cfcuk, told BBC Sport that fans would be unhappy with Benitez as their new boss. "Rafa Benitez is not a Chelsea manager," he said. "Some people are born to play for or manage certain clubs and for us, Benitez isn't what we want. "When he was Liverpool manager and Jose Mourinho was Chelsea boss there was a bit of 'beef' between them. "He was very dismissive of Chelsea, very rude towards us, and my impression of him was that whenever anything went wrong it was always somebody else's fault, not his." Former Liverpool and Germany midfielder Dietmar Hamann, a Champions League winner under Benitez at Anfield, believes the Spaniard will improve Chelsea. "He is a very talented and outstanding manager," he said. "He's a very meticulous worker and he puts a lot of emphasis on tactical exercises." Chelsea's declaration that Benitez is only manager until the end fo the season indicates Abramovich is still interested in landing Guardiola once the former Barcelona manager decides to return to the game. Guardiola, 41, is midway through a 12-month sabbatical after leaving Barcelona at the end of last season. He won 14 trophies in four years at Barca, including three titles and the Champions League twice. Di Matteo, 42, won the Champions League and FA Cup as caretaker manager last season and was given a two-year deal in June. The Italian spoke of his "deep and unreserved passion" for Chelsea despite being sacked as manager after just eight months in charge. His dismissal came hours after defeat to Juventus, leaving the Blues on the brink of a Champions League exit.
Chelsea have appointed former Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez as interim manager until the end of the season.
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The Society to Sustain and Support the Rural Countryside has raised money to buy the Pwllhai site in Cardigan, Ceredigion, by selling shares. It wants to build a car park for 100 vehicles, and hopes to develop a community shop to promote local goods. The group said it would exchange contracts for the site next month. A campaign was launched in June to buy the old farmers' co-op and surrounding buildings. So far, 300 people have bought shares at £200 each. The share offer has also been boosted by a bank loan. The society, a not-for-profit consortium, has the backing of the town's chamber of commerce and Ceredigion AM Elin Jones. Other backers said the project would breathe new life into the town centre. Society chair Shan Williams said: "This has been a fantastic achievement with local people taking control of local issues. "Many people have bought shares for their children to invest in the their future and the town's." Treasurer Cris Tomos said shareholders could receive a 5% dividend from the project. The share offer will remain open until contracts are exchanged at the end of September. Hadzialic, 29, is minister for higher education in the centre-left government and Sweden's first Muslim minister. She called the drink-driving incident "the greatest mistake of my life". Hadzialic, who arrived in Sweden aged five from Bosnia-Hercegovina, drank two glasses of wine before being stopped on the bridge linking Denmark and Sweden. She faces a possible term of up to six months in prison after police detected a blood-alcohol level of 0.2 grams per litre. Booze calculator: What's your drinking nationality? Explaining her error, she said she had drunk one glass of sparkling wine and one of red after a night out in Copenhagen. She set off for Sweden's southern city of Malmo four hours later. Hadzialic said she thought that would have been enough time for her body to get rid of the alcohol. Explaining her decision to quit, the Social Democrat told reporters: "I choose to do this because I believe what I have done is that serious." Sweden is one of several European countries which have low alcohol limits for drivers. UK, Malta: 0.8 (Scotland 0.5) United States: 0.8 Most European countries, including Germany, France, Spain, Italy: 0.5 Sweden, Poland, Estonia, Cyprus: 0.2 Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia - no alcohol while driving A 0.5-limit would mean an average man can take take a small glass of beer or a large glass of wine and women to half a pint of beer or a small glass of wine Sources: drinkingandyou.com; European Transport Safety Council
A group behind plans to rejuvenate part of a town centre is celebrating after striking a deal to buy a piece of land. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Sweden's youngest ever government minister, Aida Hadzialic, has resigned after being caught driving over the alcoholic limit.
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Ronald Burton was convicted of lewd and libidinous behaviour towards one boy, who was aged between 11 and 13, from 1994 until 1996. The 60-year-old, from East Kilbride, was also convicted of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old boy in 2014. At the High Court in Glasgow, a judge told now-retired Burton that he had acted "disgracefully" towards the boys. Lady Stacey told him: "You abused the trust that the children had in you." Burton, who maintains his innocence, showed no emotion as he was led handcuffed to the cells. His lawyer said he had been a "gifted" teacher, but that his reputation now "lay in tatters". The court was previously told that Burton had taught maths and had been an assistant principal teacher. The jury heard that he got to know the first victim around 1994 when he was in first year and later went on to abuse him. The abuse ended when the boy was around 15. The victim told the court: "I ended up thinking I was the one in the wrong." Burton later moved schools and eventually abused a second boy. The teacher was reported to police after the first victim told he felt "worthless" and later confronted Burton. In his closing speech, prosecutor Paul Kearney described Burton as "highly manipulative" in carrying out "systematic sexual abuse". Burton had faced other charges including claims he raped the second victim and also tried to hypnotise him, but these were dropped by prosecutors.
A teacher who sexually abused two pupils at South Lanarkshire secondary schools has been jailed for six years.
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Rovers fans showed their opposition to Indian owners Venky's by not taking their seats until the 18th minute and then walking out in the 75th minute. Sam Gallagher's superb early volley put Blackburn ahead at the break. Dave Edwards headed in Matt Doherty's cross to level but Wolves, who sacked Walter Zenga on Tuesday, are now without a win in their last six games. Blackburn fans held a protest outside the ground before kick-off, while the timing of their late entry and early departure reflected the date of the club's founding in 1875. Several banners criticising the club's owners were visible in the sparsely-populated stands at Ewood Park throughout the match. After falling behind the visitors, with caretaker boss Rob Edwards in the dugout amid reports Nigel Pearson has been interviewed to replace Zenga, looked bright and could have levelled through Edwards or Conor Coady before the break. Substitute goalkeeper Andy Lonergan denied Rovers striker Gallagher a second goal just after the hour mark and the hosts may have complaints about the equaliser, with Doherty narrowly offside when he picked up the ball after Blackburn keeper Jason Steele palmed away Joao Teixeira's shot. Victory would have lifted Rovers out of the relegation zone, but they are now 23rd, while Wolves are three points above the bottom three in 17th. Match ends, Blackburn Rovers 1, Wolverhampton Wanderers 1. Second Half ends, Blackburn Rovers 1, Wolverhampton Wanderers 1. Attempt missed. Matt Doherty (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Ivan Cavaleiro. Attempt missed. Danny Guthrie (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Ben Marshall. Attempt missed. Stephen Hendrie (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left. Assisted by Anthony Stokes. Attempt missed. Sam Gallagher (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from the right side of the six yard box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Anthony Stokes with a cross. Attempt missed. João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left following a corner. Attempt blocked. Matt Doherty (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Stephen Hendrie. Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Jason Lowe. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Kortney Hause. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Danny Batth. Attempt saved. Craig Conway (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ben Marshall. Attempt missed. Matt Doherty (Wolverhampton Wanderers) left footed shot from outside the box is too high following a corner. Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Jason Steele. Attempt saved. Ivan Cavaleiro (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top right corner. Assisted by Conor Coady. Substitution, Blackburn Rovers. Anthony Stokes replaces Marvin Emnes. Goal! Blackburn Rovers 1, Wolverhampton Wanderers 1. David Edwards (Wolverhampton Wanderers) header from very close range to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Matt Doherty with a cross. Attempt saved. João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Hélder Costa. Attempt missed. João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left from a direct free kick. Danny Guthrie (Blackburn Rovers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Conor Coady (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Danny Guthrie (Blackburn Rovers). Attempt missed. David Edwards (Wolverhampton Wanderers) header from the left side of the six yard box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Hélder Costa with a cross. Substitution, Blackburn Rovers. Stephen Hendrie replaces Charlie Mulgrew because of an injury. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Charlie Mulgrew (Blackburn Rovers) because of an injury. João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers) is shown the yellow card. Foul by João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers). Craig Conway (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Attempt missed. Gordon Greer (Blackburn Rovers) header from the right side of the six yard box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Craig Conway with a cross following a corner. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Conor Coady. Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Ivan Cavaleiro replaces Jed Wallace. Foul by João Teixeira (Wolverhampton Wanderers). Craig Conway (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the left wing. Attempt saved. Sam Gallagher (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Marvin Emnes. Offside, Blackburn Rovers. Charlie Mulgrew tries a through ball, but Craig Conway is caught offside. Attempt blocked. Darragh Lenihan (Blackburn Rovers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Sam Gallagher with a headed pass. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Conor Coady. Ben Marshall (Blackburn Rovers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Championship strugglers Blackburn drew with managerless Wolves in a game marked by protests by home supporters.
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Thousands of birds died when 72,000 tonnes of crude oil spilled in 1996. Nick Ainger told BBC Radio Wales the scrapping of the UK's emergency towing vessel fleet showed lessons had not been learned 20 years on. The Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said it was felt the shipping industry should fund such a service. The stranding of the Sea Empress oil tanker at the mouth of the Cleddau Estuary off Milford Haven in February 1996 resulted in 72,000 tonnes of crude North Sea oil escaping into the sea. Scores of volunteers helped open and run a makeshift animal hospital where more than 7,000 dead or oiled birds were taken - just a fraction of the number affected. About 120 miles of Welsh coastline were contaminated with the total cost of the clean-up operation put at £60m. The first two tugs in the UK's emergency towing vessel fleet were introduced in 1994 following the Donaldson report into the MV Braer oil spill. It was expanded to four in 2000 when a tug at Falmouth, Cornwall, gave cover to south Wales for the first time. The UK coalition government scrapped the fleet in 2011 as a cost-saving measure, although one tug, in Orkney, won a reprieve until March 2016. Mr Ainger told the Sunday Supplement programme: "We now have a position, 20 years after the Sea Empress, 23 after the Braer, where we have no emergency towing vehicles stationed around our coast. "Ironically, other countries in Europe, in Spain, in France, Germany, Norway have got government-financed emergency towing vessels. "We, with our huge coastline with all the shipping that we have coming not only in and out of Milford Haven, but around our shores from the North Sea carrying crude oil, we haven't got a government-supported emergency towing vessel. "I think that lesson should be re-learned very, very quickly before we have another disaster." An MCA spokeswoman said: "The government believes that responsibility for ensuring the operational safety of ships is properly a matter for the commercial shipping industry, working in partnership with the tug and salvage industries; it did not believe that it was appropriate for the taxpayer to fund this provision." She added that no vessel had run aground or foundered in UK waters, nor had any pollution occurred, as a result of a ship being unable to engage a suitable towing vessel. The 24-year-old featured 44 times for the Dons this season, including an outing as a substitute in Monday's League Two play-off final victory. Meanwhile, striker Adebayo Azeez has been offered a new deal by Wimbledon boss Neal Ardley. Azeez, 22, has scored 14 goals in 98 appearances since joining the south-west London club in summer 2014.
The Sea Empress oil disaster off Pembrokeshire could be repeated due to cuts to coastal emergency services, the county's former MP has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] AFC Wimbledon have taken up an option in Jon Meades' contract and extended the left-back's stay at Kingsmeadow.
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Mr Wilson's comments came in an email to a constituent who had asked if he would wear a red ribbon supporting World AIDS day. Ms Bradley was speaking on BBC's The View on Thursday. "I know Sammy, I know him well. I know he's forthright," she said. "I know he says what he thinks and what he feels. If I'm honest, I would say I was slightly disappointed by that reaction. I believe it wouldn't have been that difficult to wear a red ribbon in support. "I don't believe that would have been difficult for anyone to do", she added. Her comments came after the East Antrim MP said there are areas of medicine and diseases which "have not received the same attention as AIDS and which affect far more people". These diseases were "not always as a result of lifestyle choices", he said, adding they "deserve higher priorities then they have been given at present". The DUP MP told his constituent that considerable resources had been put into dealing with AIDS "sometimes at the expense of other illnesses which affect people, such as dementia and cancer, and which are not always as a result of their own behaviour". Mr Wilson said he appreciated his constituent's concerns about AIDS but added: "You will appreciate that there are people who suffer from mental health problems, dementia and cancer which also have a huge impact on their lives and which are equally deserving of resources".
The DUP MLA Paula Bradley has said she is disappointed by comments made by her party colleague Sammy Wilson questioning the emphasis placed on HIV & AIDS over other diseases.
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The AU mission (Amisom) says it repulsed the attack, killing 110 militants. Residents in Halgan told the BBC they had heard a huge bang followed by a heavy exchange of gunfire. Amisom supports the government as it fights to regain control of the country from al-Shabab. In a series of tweets it has said its soldiers, alongside troops from the Somali army, "drove back the attackers who are now on the run with the joint forces in pursuit". Ethiopia has denied that any of its soldiers were killed. Africa Live: More on this and other news stories It is not possible to verify the various claims about how many people were killed. Somali Security Minister Abdirizak Mohamed Ahmed told state-owned Radio Muqdisho that officials had counted the bodies of 240 militants outside the base. He said that nine Amisom soldiers had lost their lives. He said that the attackers had driven a car bomb into the base. Ethiopia is one of five countries contributing troops to the 22,000-strong mission and this is the first time an Ethiopian-run Amisom base has been attacked. Halgan, 260km (161 miles) north of the capital, Mogadishu, is part of the area of Somalia patrolled by Ethiopian soldiers. In January, al-Shabab targeted a Kenyan base in el-Ade, southern Somalia. It said it had killed more than 100 soldiers but the Kenyan authorities have not confirmed the death toll. Al-Shabab has also attacked Amisom bases run by troops from Burundi and Uganda. An inspection of custody suites in May and June found most issues identified previously had "drifted or got worse". Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) said it was "disappointing" that only a fifth of its recommendations had been achieved. Lancashire Police said it would "strive" to "learn and improve". The HMIC report identified a number of failures following unannounced inspections at Blackpool, Blackburn, Preston, Lancaster and Burnley. Inspectors found there was no policy over how force was used in the custody suites and monitoring was "limited". And CCTV coverage in cells was still not pixellated, meaning detainees had no privacy when using the toilet. But the report praised mental health support as "particularly good" and praised staff for their "courteous and professional manner with detainees". The inspection, the second in Lancashire, was part of a national programme looking at strategy, treatment and conditions, individual rights and health care. HMIC said: This was a disappointing inspection. The force had failed to build on the progress we identified previously. "With generally good treatment of detainees and mostly reasonable conditions, the fundamental building blocks remained intact. However, there was a clear need for the force to develop." A Lancashire Police spokesman said the force was committed to ensuring that "everyone who comes into our custody is treated with courtesy and respect" and had developed new IT and CCTV systems to address concerns. "Whilst we have previously accepted there are issues around our ability to monitor "use of force" data (resolved via the new system), we do not believe our staff in general use force itself in a disproportionate manner." Pisi was sent off by referee Wayne Barnes in the 14th minute of Bristol's 28-20 win over their fellow strugglers. The 34-year-old Samoan pleaded guilty to tackling Shillcock in the air. Having already missed the 24-23 New Year's Day win at Sale, he now also misses Saturday's trip to Northampton, The RFU Disciplinary panel said: "The player accepted the charge on the basis that this was a reckless challenge with no intent to cause injury. The panel agreed and determined this was a low-end entry point giving full mitigation on account of his plea and remorse." Bristol acting head coach Mark Tainton told BBC Sport at the time: "Tusi has chased the ball. His eyes are on the ball all the time, he has not got off the ground. Technically, he is below the player's hips, and he has a responsibility to bring the player down." Shillcock missed Worcester's next game, their New Year's Day win over Harlequins, but head coach Carl Hogg expects him to be fit to face Gloucester on Saturday.
Somali Islamist militant group al-Shabab says it has killed 60 Ethiopian soldiers in an attack on an African Union base in central Somalia. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Children and adults with mental health problems are being held in custody for too long by Lancashire Police, a report said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Bristol centre Tusi Pisi has been handed a two-week suspension for his aerial tackle on Worcester stand-off Jamie Shillcock in their Boxing Day meeting at Ashton Gate.
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The bill was approved by more than two-thirds of the lower chamber, despite opposition from the Catholic Church. The proposal has already been backed by the upper house. It is expected to be signed into law within two weeks. President Jose Mujica has been championing the bill. Despite opposition from the Roman Catholic Church in Uruguay, 71 out of 92 deputies have voted in favour of the measure. By Vladimir HernandezBBC Mundo A wave of reform seems to be sweeping through Uruguay. Its Congress has started to debate the possible legalisation of cannabis, it passed a law to give women the right to opt for an abortion, and now it has allowed gay couples to marry. Uruguay has become the second country in the Latin America, after Argentina, to legalise same-sex marriages. This has attracted criticism from some sectors, such as the Roman Catholic Church, which say that the law weakens the institution of marriage. According to Ignacio Zuasnabar, director of the Uruguayan pollster Equipos: "There has been more acceptance of gay marriage in recent years as public opinion seems in favour of giving more rights to same-sex couples. "Things are different with other divisive subjects, like the possible legalisation of cannabis and the recent law that approved abortions, which have more polarised views or simply a majority of people that disapprove of them," he told the BBC. "Freedom, freedom," shouted activists who were attending the session in the Congress building in Montevideo as the result was announced. "Same-sex couples have always existed," said Mr Mujica, a former left-wing guerrilla, in a television interview with Russia Today earlier this year. The Marriage Equality Law was approved by the Senate last week by 23 votes to 8. It allows same-sex couples to choose the order of the surnames of the children they adopt. And it also increases the age of consent for sexual relations to 16, from the current 12 for women and 14 for men. In recent years, Uruguay has moved to allow same-sex civil unions, adoption by gay couples, and to allow gay members of the armed forces. Uruguay's neighbour Argentina legalised gay marriage in 2010. Same-sex marriages have been legal in Mexico City since 2009. In May, Brazil's Supreme Court voted overwhelmingly in favour of allowing same-sex couples the same legal rights as married heterosexuals. Buy-to-let investors have faced a stamp duty surcharge, tax relief changes and stricter affordability checks. The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) said an expected recovery in lending to the sector had failed to materialise. The impact of these changes should be assessed before any new policies were designed, it said. However, some would argue that the changes have started to rebalance a housing market that had been skewed in favour of buy-to-let investors and had blocked young people from getting on the housing ladder. The CML had forecast originally that total buy-to-let lending would reach £38bn this year and the same amount in 2018, but it has now cut that to £35bn in 2017 and £33bn in 2018. Total lending to the sector was nearly £41bn last year. "Buy-to-let had a weak start to 2017, and the sector's contribution to overall net mortgage lending has fallen considerably over the last year," said CML director general Paul Smee. "While falling mortgage interest rates have helped support borrowing, tax and prudential measures are exerting pressure on the buy-to-let market. Following the distortion of the stamp duty change on second properties last year, we expected a slight recovery in lending levels. However, this has not materialised, and we therefore have lowered our forecast for buy-to-let lending this year and next. "This re-emphasises the case for avoiding further changes to the tax and regulatory framework until the effect of these already in train have been properly assessed." The CML forecast for mortgage lending as a whole stands at £248bn for 2017. However, it said the housing market had "stalled" in the past few months with monthly UK property sales static at around 100,000, reflecting the wider economic picture. Mortgage lending remained relatively stable with interest rates remaining low - although there are some signs of a slight increase in the offing - and government assistance for helping some first-time buyers. Where can I afford to live?
Congress in Uruguay has voted overwhelmingly to legalise gay marriage, becoming the second country in Latin America to do so, after Argentina. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Landlords should be spared any new tax and regulation changes after a "weak start" to 2017 for the UK buy-to-let sector, lenders say.
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Hundreds of bricks were blown from Oxgangs Primary school during Storm Gertude in January. Parents have been told that pupils should not attend the school on Wednesday and alternative arrangements will be put in place from Thursday. The school will not reopen until after the Easter holidays on Monday 11 April. The school was shut immediately after the incident which happened on 29 January but reopened a few days later following a safety inspection. Edinburgh City Council said the decision to close the school again was taken after a further building survey was carried out earlier this week. Councillor Paul Godzik, education convener, said: "By closing the school now it means the necessary works can be started immediately. "The council will be providing alternative arrangements at other locations to ensure pupils' education can continue until the start of the Easter holidays. "I want to reassure parents this is a purely precautionary measure but I am sure everyone will agree that the health and safety of our pupils and staff is paramount." The Easter holidays begin on Friday 25 March. Parents were informed of the closure by an email from the council's education department on Tuesday. It said: "I realise this may cause inconvenience for you regarding childcare arrangements and apologise for this. "We will confirm by 2pm tomorrow exactly what the contingency arrangements are for your child to attend school from Thursday until the Easter holiday." A parent, who did not want to be named and has a five-year-old son at the school, told the BBC Scotland news website: "I'm shocked and upset that this school survey wasn't done sooner as it's terrible thinking the children have been going to school when it's obviously so unsafe that they are immediately having to close it now. "I hadn't seen any workmen or officials at the wall until yesterday, which is unbelievable as you would think the company that built the school would have been wanting to make sure it was safe straight after the wall blew down weeks ago." She added: "It's very short notice to be told the night before too that the children are to be off tomorrow. "It will also be very difficult to get my son to the school they choose for the next week. I'm very concerned and unhappy about all of this." Powys Teaching Health Board won the overall award as well as the improving quality through better use of resources award. There were nine categories open to NHS health organisations. Health Minister Mark Drakeford congratulated the winners in a tweet, calling them "committed people working to improve care". The winners were:
An Edinburgh primary school where part of a wall was blown off during stormy weather earlier this year has been closed as a "precautionary measure". [NEXT_CONCEPT] Awards to celebrate good practice in the Welsh NHS have been handed out to winning teams and projects.
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Robert Dobinson, 33, from Faringdon, was found at a mooring area near Bridge Street in Abingdon in October. He was taken to hospital but died from his injuries. Natasha Elderfield, 41, of no fixed address, was remanded in custody after a plea hearing at Oxford Crown Court. She will stand trial at the same court on 7 April.
A woman has denied murdering a man who was stabbed to death in an Oxfordshire town.
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Jackson's Lane and King Street in Carmarthen are transformed in the proposals, which form part of a master plan for the town. A new town square with an outdoor LED screen has been proposed for Jackson's Lane, while King Street would become pedestrian-friendly. Carmarthen Town Regeneration Forum is holding a public consultation on the plans. It takes place in the former Myrddin Day Centre in John Street, Carmarthen, on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Carmarthenshire council said King Street was a hub for local culture, arts and crafts but that it was dominated by vehicles "which causes a cluttered pedestrian environment". It has proposed removing vehicles to allow business owners to put tables and chairs on the street, which would make it less of a "thoroughfare to the town centre" and more "of a destination in its own right". Jackson's Lane is a key route for pedestrians joining King Street, Jackson's Square and Red Street, but the council said it had "no real sense of place". It plans to create a town square that would be free of vehicles and would become a focal point and meeting place, with shops, cafes, restaurants and the LED screen which could display sporting events, TV and films. There are also plans to bring Jackson's Square and Chapel Street back to life, where kiosks could be created for new small businesses to open. Marian Ritson, from Siop Pethau Bychain on King Street, welcomed the proposals. "For years we've been in discussion with the council with regards to developing King Street, as this is one of the oldest parts of Carmarthen. It's full of independent shops, which gives the town a different feel," she said. "When people find King Street they come back all the time, but the challenge is to lead them here in the first place." Dai Jenkins, deputy leader of Carmarthenshire council, said: "A sum of money has been put into the five-year plan - the capital programme - £500,000. "But we have to start the process first, we need to consult with the people of Carmarthen before we can move on." Council executive board member for regeneration and leisure, councillor Meryl Gravell said: "I would urge Carmarthen residents to take the opportunity to see the exciting proposals for Jackson's Lane and King Street and to tell us what they think of them." Lampard, 38, played the final game of his initial two-year deal with the Major League Soccer outfit as they lost 5-0 to Toronto at Yankee Stadium. It completed an 8-0 aggregate defeat and eliminated NYC from the play-offs. Lampard, who signed for NYC after leaving Chelsea in 2014, has scored 12 times in 16 games this year, including a hat-trick against Colorado Rapids. The former England midfielder had a difficult first season in the MLS - scoring three times in 10 appearances having arrived later than initially planned after a spell at Manchester City.
Plans to regenerate a Carmarthenshire town go on display on Wednesday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] New York City have until 31 December to trigger a one-year extension to Frank Lampard's contract.
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Edinburgh will host the start of the event for the first time with the finish line in Kelso in the Borders. The 188-kilometre opening leg on Sunday 3 September will leave from the Royal Mile and race through East Lothian. Riders face a 79-kilometre loop through the Borders which will allow fans at the finish in Kelso to see them race through the town twice. Last year's event also opened with a Scottish stage from Glasgow to Castle Douglas which was won by German sprinter Andre Greipel. VisitScotland's director of events Paul Bush said: "We are delighted to be welcoming the Tour of Britain back to Scotland this summer. "The opening stage will take in some truly wonderful and iconic scenery as it travels from Edinburgh, through East Lothian and onto the Scottish Borders, providing an amazing spectacle for spectators and riders alike. "Scotland is the perfect stage for cycling events and the Tour of Britain is fantastic race that brings strong economic and social benefits to the country." Craig Burn, chief executive of Scottish Cycling, said the organisation loved to see major events come to the country. "To have stage one of the Tour of Britain for the second year in a row is even better," he added. "Across the past four years Scottish Cycling has grown massively, with membership exceeding 11,000. "We know that major events have been key in helping this number to grow, therefore securing and staging elite racing is fundamental to achieving our inspiration to participation strategy." Councils in Edinburgh, East Lothian and the Borders have all welcomed the announcement. It will be the sixth time that the opening stage of the Tour of Britain has taken place in Scotland since the race was revived in 2004. The race has only once before visited Edinburgh, in 2015, while the Borders has hosted the event on four occasions, most recently in 2015 when Team Sky's Elia Viviani won a stage finishing at Floors Castle outside Kelso. Race director Mick Bennett said: "We are delighted to be able to start this year's OVO Energy Tour of Britain from the very heart of Edinburgh for the first time, and a location that is famous the world over. "The backdrop from the Royal Mile of St Giles Cathedral and the Castle will provide a fitting send off for the world's top riders. "That we have been able to work with our partners in the Scottish Borders to create a finishing loop will not only reward spectators at the finish in Kelso, but enable the race to showcase more of the area, including the Eildon Hills towards the end of the stage." After the Scottish stage, riders face a further seven legs in the event which finishes in Cardiff on 10 September. Forest have lost five of their last six games in the Championship and lie in 14th place after Saturday's 3-0 defeat against Sheffield Wednesday. Former Forest striker Freedman replaced Stuart Pearce in February 2015 and won 19 of his 57 games as boss. The club said first-team coach Paul Williams will take over as manager until the end of the season. Freedman guided Forest to a 14th place finish last season and leaves with the side in exactly the same position. He enjoyed a promising start to his managerial career, taking over at Crystal Palace in January 2011 and guiding the struggling club to Championship safety. In 2012, the Scot opted to join Bolton in the same division. He steered them clear of a relegation battle and narrowly missed out on qualifying for the play-offs. He left the club in 2014 by mutual consent after a run of one win in the first 10 league games of the season. Although Forest enjoyed a 13-game unbeaten run from November to February, they have failed to threaten the play-off spots. They have been restricted to free and loan signings since December 2014, having been placed under a transfer embargo for exceeding Financial Fair Play limits. They have the opportunity to have the embargo lifted in June. Forest's next match is in the league away to third-placed Hull on Tuesday (kick-off 19:45 GMT).
The Tour of Britain cycling race will open with a Scottish stage once again this year. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Nottingham Forest have sacked manager Dougie Freedman after 13 months in charge at the City Ground.
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It comes amid signs that Argentina may start talks with investors who refused to take part in two restructurings. Argentina has been in a bitter row with hedge funds which are demanding full payment for bonds they bought after the country defaulted. "We want to pay 100% of creditors," the president said on Friday. Argentina has for years refused to even consider talks with so-called "hold-out" creditors whom Ms Fernandez has called "vultures". The country has been in a 12-year fight in the US courts with hold-outs who declined to participate a 2005 and 2010 revamp of debt securities. Under the deal, 92% of bondholders accepted about a third of the original value of their investment. But on Monday, a US Supreme Court ruling sided with bondholders demanding Argentina pay them the full $1.3bn (£766m) value. The bondholders also won the right to use the US courts to force Argentina to reveal where it owns assets around the world. The court's decision means that bondholders should find it easier to collect their debts. Ms Fernandez made her comments during a speech celebrating Argentine Flag Day. She said government lawyers will go to New York to ask the judge who ordered the payment to give Argentina fair conditions to negotiate with the hold-outs. Following the Supreme Court's decision, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned that Argentina's legal defeat may have wider implications. The IMF said it was concerned about "broader systemic implications" for other countries seeking to restructure their debts.
Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has said her government would negotiate with all the country's creditors.
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The facility at Newcastle Science Central will have a flexible auditorium and lecture theatre for 2,200 Newcastle University students. Pro-vice-chancellor Prof Suzanne Cholerton said the facility would provide an "excellent environment" for learning and research. The £350m hub is based on the site of the old Scottish and Newcastle brewery. The new building will have a "sustainable urban drainage system" to hold back rainwater running off the site. It will also house an exhibition space and a number of seminar rooms. Design team Sheppard Robson said it had a "strident design that resonates both with the campus context and the city's history of scientific innovation".
A £29m learning and teaching centre at a science and engineering hub has been approved.
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The Hull City left-back says the players are determined to bounce back from the 1-0 defeat by Georgia. Despite dropping to fourth in Group D, Robertson insists the squad will not dwell on the disappointment in Tbilisi. "We have got such a big game on Monday now and we need the fans and everyone to get behind us," said Robertson. Before facing Georgia, Robertson had said the qualifier had a "must-win" feel in terms of Scotland's hopes of booking a place in next summer's Euro 2016 finals. Following the defeat, Robertson said: "This group is far from over and it would be typical of us to say it - as fans and in the media - but we as a squad are staying together so we need the fans to stay together with us right now." Robertson expressed his gratitude to the Scotland fans that travelled to Tbilisi, and apologised for the result. "We've got to take it on the chin, and obviously the fans will be disappointed but no more disappointed than the boys," he told BBC Scotland. Shaun Maloney, who has just joined his international team-mate at Hull after leaving Major League Soccer side Chicago Fire, admitted the defeat was a setback. "We have to come again on Monday," said Maloney. "Obviously we're going into it as huge underdogs with the way Germany have played over the last year or two. "We'll give it our best shot and see if it's good enough." After facing the Germans, Scotland also have a home game against Poland on October 8, before finishing the group away to Gibraltar. "These are two humungous games and it adds pressure, but this is why teams qualify and teams don't," added Maloney. "I think we have to deal with that pressure and we are very hopeful that we can change the result of this evening on Monday, or on the following gathering." Not only does it attract foraging bees, but it also encourages nesting, say researchers at University of Sussex. In past decades, many bumblebee species have declined, due to a number of factors, including intensive farming. The study, published in Molecular Ecology, suggest farms given funding to improve the environment can increase the size of wild bumblebee populations. However, rarer species, which forage over shorter distances, may need special attention, as the method of management appeared to have no effect, said scientists. Agri-environment schemes are now funded as part of the Common Agricultural Policy. Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) farms are rewarded for planting strips along the side of fields with bee-friendly plants such as red clover, bird's-foot-trefoil and common knapweed. The scientists analysed bumblebee populations on HLS farms in West Sussex and Hampshire over two years. They found greater numbers of common bumblebee species and evidence of more nests on HLS farms, compared with farms without bee-friendly schemes. However, for rarer bee species such as the common carder bee, there was little difference between the two types of farmland. "The flower-rich strips on farms may be too few and too scattered in the landscape to benefit those species unable to cover larger distances," said Thomas Wood of the University of Sussex. "These rarer species could be helped by targeting planting on land near existing colonies and improving the plant quality of existing buffer strips and hedgerows." Insect pollination has been valued at around £690M per year for UK crop production. A recent study found that nearly one in 10 of Europe's native wild bee species face extinction. The European Red List, drawn up by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, found 9.2% of nearly 2,000 species are threatened with extinction. Threats include loss of habitat from intensive farming, pesticide use, urban development and climate change. Follow Helen on Twitter.
Andrew Robertson has urged Scotland fans to stick with the team ahead of Monday's Euro 2016 qualifier against Germany at Hampden. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Planting farmland with strips of flowers can boost the number of wild bumblebees, a study has confirmed.
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Two men were attacked in Ivory Blacks in Oswald Street at about 23:00 on Friday 14 October. Police Scotland want to talk to two men captured on camera in relation to the incident. Both men are described as white and aged 25 to 35. The first is 5ft 8in tall with tattoo sleeves, and the other is 6ft 2in with shaved reddish hair. Anyone with information has been urged to contact the police. The 20-year-old spent time with the Blundell Park side's National League rivals Cheltenham earlier this season, making nine league appearances. Jennings, who has played once for his parent club, could make his Mariners debut in Saturday's trip to Halifax. Grimsby are currently third in the National League, 13 points behind leaders Cheltenham. Ports around the world are refusing to let Hanjin Shipping vessels dock or unload, fearing they will not get paid. The ships and cargo are also likely to be seized by creditors if they do dock. This has left boats and crew stranded around the globe, including Ruairidh Hanna, from Dingwall, and three other Glasgow College sea cadets. The group's ship is anchored east of Singapore. The four cadets were aboard the ship Hanjin Louisiana during their second sea phase as part of their nautical science course at the college. Mr Hanna's mother, Rhona MacLennan, said they had been due to arrive home on 2 September, but had been in touch on 31 August to say there was "something funny going on". "As far as I'm aware they've not had any instruction to go into port," Ms MacLennan told BBC Scotland. She said she had last spoken to her 22-year-old son on Saturday. "By this point they'd been told there was a possibility they'd get off the boat on Tuesday - that there was a supply boat going in to supply them. "So the boys were very upbeat and excited at the thought they'd be getting home. But that never happened - we don't know why." There is also a reported risk of pirates operating in the South China Sea, where their ship is at anchor, which Ms MacLennan said added to the worry. "The area they're in is a piracy risk area so that brings a whole different outlook on it," she said. SNP MP Drew Hendry said the UK government should take "urgent action" to assist them. Mr Hendry said: "This is a completely frustrating and potentially dangerous situation for the crew and a huge worry for their families - and I really want Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson to get on and take action to get them to a place of safety. ''After Ruairidh got in touch, my immediate concern was to get him and his colleagues home to their families. Over the past couple of weeks my office and I have been working with the trade union Nautilus and other agencies to find ways to make this happen." The MP added that the group faced a "very real prospect" of being stranded for several months. A spokesman for Clyde Marine Training said: "We currently have four cadets on board Hanjin Louisiana, which is at anchor off Singapore. "We are in regular contact with both them and their families and understand just how frustrating this situation is for them. "Their wellbeing is of paramount importance and we remain in close communication with all parties concerned in order to offer any practical assistance we can and to ensure that they are able to return home as soon as is possible." The troubled shipping group has debts of more than $5bn and has struggled to raise funding to rescue $14bn (£10.5bn) worth of cargo stranded round the world following its collapse. Hanjin filed for receivership in South Korea in August after attempts to bail out the indebted company failed. There are an estimated 89 Hanjin ships out of its 141-vessel fleet in difficulty, and some have been seized by creditors.
CCTV images of two men have been released in connection to a serious assault outside a Glasgow music venue. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Grimsby Town have signed Wigan Athletic winger Ryan Jennings on loan until the end of the season. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Four Scottish cadets have been stranded at sea after South Korea's biggest shipping company filed for bankruptcy.
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The 1,350-tonne Pelamis was sold by the Stromness-based European Marine Energy Centre (Emec) and is reported to come with a cash payment of about £47,000. It was the first deep-water, floating wave energy machine to generate power into the national grid. The company that built it, Pelamis Wave Power, went into administration in November 2014. The £2m generator, installed in 2010, is currently tied up at Lyness. Orkney Islands Council said the sum it had been given by Emec would cover the cost of scrapping it - but the authority said it would prefer to find another use for it. Council leader James Stockan said the wave converter was one of the first of its kind and "symbolic of the industry". Mr Stockan told BBC Radio Orkney it was possible the device could be put to good use somewhere. "The cost to the council in the short term is relatively nothing until we get a chance to investigate if it can it be used as a breakwater anywhere - because we know it's going to be a number of years before we get to build any new pier structures and things," he said. "If it had been towed away the critics would have said, you should have kept that for something. "So we're actually saying we will keep it for a period, but if we can't find any really good purpose for it, we'll have to re-examine what we do with it then." In 2012, the inventor of the Pelamis wave energy device, Dr Richard Yemm, won the annual Saltire Prize Medal for his outstanding contribution to the development of the marine renewables sector. But the company was not able to cash in on its technology and all staff at Pelamis Wave Power were made redundant when the company went into administration. Emec managing director Neil Kermode said his centre had bought the generator after the company's demise because he did not want to see Pelamis simply "chopped up" for scrap. "We touted it around for a couple of years, didn't really get anywhere and thought,OK it's not going anywhere, it's costing us money to keep it tied to the quayside at Lyness, we've got to get rid of it," he said. However, Mr Kermode said towing the huge "sea snake" device away for scrap would be expensive and risky, so Emec agreed to sell the generator - along with the cash payment - to the council for £1 in the hope a use could be found for it. "That was a world first that happened off the beach just round the corner from Stromness," he said. "I still have a lingering hope that one day maybe we'll look back on it and think that's actually a really valuable artefact - that was something that was one of the keystones of the wave industry when we look back at it in years to come. "It may be taken away, it may be scrapped at a later date, but personally if we can keep a hold of the thing here then there's a chance we can do something more with it."
Orkney Islands Council has bought a 180m (591ft) long redundant wave-power generator for a £1.
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Police said they were called to a house on Frederick Avenue in Carlow town at about 13:30 local time. It followed a report of a man being stabbed. RTÉ said the victim was seriously injured when he was found and was later pronounced dead. Media playback is not supported on this device Rhys Webb's two late tries clinched an extraordinary win which ended Blues' European Champions Cup qualification hopes while maintaining his team's. Ospreys hit back from 17-7 behind as Hanno Dirksen' (2) and Sam Underhill added to James King's first-half try. Aled Summerhill and Josh Navidi crossed for the Blues. Ospreys moved into seventh place in the Pro12 table with a home game to come against Ulster on the final day of the regular season, next Saturday. Media playback is not supported on this device The Swansea-based team could clinch a place in the Champions Cup next season if other results go their way. Having led earlier in the game, Blues were 27-26 ahead with six minutes remaining, before Webb's dramatic intervention. It was a treat for a record crowd of more than 60,000 for this event as the lead changed hands seven times. In the first instalment of a Judgement Day double-header at the Principality Stadium, Ospreys did not take one penalty attempt at goal as they strove for a bonus point. Blues just needed to win, and with Gareth Anscombe looking assured at fly-half and the back-row regularly turning over Ospreys possession, they looked well capable of it. Anscombe's four penalties and a superb pass for Summerhill's try gave them a 10-point cushion early in the second half. Wing Dirksen's two tries in five minutes ignited an outstanding finish. Navidi took advantage of slack tackling before Underhill's try edged Ospreys back ahead. Anscombe's fifth penalty gave Blues a point advantage before Webb's opportunism took the game away from them in the breathless finale. If Ospreys beat Ulster with a bonus point in their final game, they could overtake Munster and claim sixth place and with it Champions Cup qualification. But as well as contemplating defeat, Blues - and Wales - were also left with a fresh injury worry over flanker Sam Warburton. Cardiff Blues: Dan Fish; Aled Summerhill, Garyn Smith, Rey Lee-Lo, Tom Isaacs; Gareth Anscombe, Lewis Jones; Gethin Jenkins (capt), Matthew Rees, Taufa'ao Filise, Josh Turnbull, James Down, Sam Warburton, Ellis Jenkins, Josh Navidi. Replacements: Kristian Dacey, Brad Thyer, Dillon Lewis, Jarrad Hoeata, Manoa Vosawai, Tomos Williams, Jarrod Evans, Gavin Evans. Ospreys: Dan Evans, Hanno Dirksen, Jonathan Spratt, Owen Watkin, Ben John, Dan Biggar, Rhys Webb (captain); Nicky Smith, Scott Baldwin, Dmitri Arhip, Adam Beard, Rynier Bernardo, Olly Cracknell, James King, Dan Lydiate. Replacements: Sam Parry, Gareth Thomas, Aaron Jarvis, Rory Thornton, Sam Underhill, Brendon Leonard, Sam Davies, Josh Matavesi. Referee: Nigel Owens (WRU) Assistant referees: Leighton Hodges, Martyn Lewis (both WRU) Citing commissioner: Dennis Jones (WRU) TMO: Jon Mason (WRU)
A man in his 20s has been arrested after a 46-year-old man died following a stabbing in County Carlow in the Republic of Ireland. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Ospreys fought back from a 10-point deficit to claim their 10th consecutive win over Cardiff Blues in a Judgement Day thriller.
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Prosecutors had seized the Bitcoins - a virtual currency - as they shut the website, which allowed users to trade in illegal drugs, last year. The seized Bitcoins were allegedly used "to facilitate money laundering", the prosecutors claimed. Bitcoins have gained popularity recently but there have been fears they may be used for illegal activities. "We continue our efforts to take the profit out of crime and signal to those who would turn to the dark web for illicit activity that they have chosen the wrong path," US prosecutor Preet Bharara said in a statement. Bitcoin is often referred to as a new kind of currency. But it may be better to think of its units as being virtual tokens that have value because enough people believe they do and there is a finite number of them. Each bitcoin is represented by a unique online registration number. These numbers are created through a process called "mining", which involves a computer solving a difficult mathematical problem with a 64-digit solution. Each time a problem is solved the computer's owner is rewarded with bitcoins. To receive a bitcoin, a user must also have a Bitcoin address - a randomly generated string of 27 to 34 letters and numbers - which acts as a kind of virtual postbox to and from which the bitcoins are sent. Since there is no registry of these addresses, people can use them to protect their anonymity when making a transaction. These addresses are in turn stored in Bitcoin wallets, which are used to manage savings. They operate like privately run bank accounts - with the proviso that if the data is lost, so are the bitcoins contained. Mr Bharara added that prosecutors were treating Bitcoins like any other asset involved in money laundering and criminal activity. "These Bitcoins were forfeited not because they are Bitcoins, but because they were, as the court found, the proceeds of crimes," he said. The US authorities have alleged that Silk Road had been designed to "enable its users to buy and sell illegal drugs and other unlawful goods and services anonymously". They said they had also filed charges against Ross William Ulbricht, the alleged owner of the site. Mr Ulbricht is also known as Dread Pirate Roberts, DPR and Silk Road, the prosecutors said. As part of the action against the Mr Ulbricht, prosecutors said they had seized an additional 144,336 Bitcoins. These are worth nearly $130m at current value. Mr Ulbricht has filed a claim contesting the seizure of the Bitcoins, asserting that they were found on his personal computer and belong to him rather than Silk Road.
The clandestine online marketplace, Silk Road, has forfeited Bitcoins worth $28m (£18m), US prosecutors have said.
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Police were called to the Penlan area at about 01:45 BST on Saturday and a local man, 41, has been taken to Morriston Hospital to be treated. South Wales Police said the suspect was arrested on suspicion of causing grievous bodily harm and had been taken to Swansea Central police station. Police officers are not looking for anyone else in connection with the incident.
A 42-year-old man has been arrested after an alleged assault in Swansea.
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Gunmen believed to be from the Boko Haram group killed several residents and burnt down Izghe over the weekend. A week earlier, 106 people were killed by gunmen in a raid on Izghe. Borno state Senator Ali Ndume told the BBC it was clear that a state of emergency imposed by the government to end the insurgency was not working. More than 500 people had been killed in Borno in the last two months, he said. The state government has pledged to spend up to $2m (£1.2m) to help rebuild areas affected by the violence. President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in three north-eastern states - Borno, Yobe and Adamawa - last year, giving the security forces extra-ordinary powers to fight Boko Haram. However, soldiers were in a "pathetic situation", and there was no sign of the army having taken extra-ordinary measures to end the violence, Mr Ndume said. "The Nigerian army can deploy more troops, more equipment and be more committed to the execution of this emergency rule," he told the BBC. The army had failed to deploy troops to Izghe after the first attack, opening the way for Boko Haram to re-enter the town, Mr Ndume said. Many people had fled after the first attack, but some elderly residents were still staying there. A resident in Izghe told the BBC that three women and a man were killed in the raid. "They [the gunmen] came to the to the town and burnt everything. They burnt all the houses," he said, on condition of anonymity. The government has repeatedly said it is winning the war against the militants, who are fighting to establish a strict Islamic state across northern Nigeria. Boko Haram has killed thousands, including many Muslims and Christians, since it began its uprising in 2009. Mr Mackenzie was suspended after comparing the player - who has a Nigerian grandfather - to a gorilla. The BBC's media editor Amol Rajan said: "Now we know he will not be asked to contribute to the paper again". A spokesman for The Sun said Mr Mackenzie "remained suspended" but would not comment on his departure. According to the Financial Times, the terms of Mr Mackenzie's exit are being negotiated. In his column, Mr MacKenzie said looking at Mr Barkley's eyes had given him a "similar feeling when seeing a gorilla at the zoo". His eyes made him "certain not only are the lights not on, there is definitely nobody at home", he wrote. Alongside the article was an image of a gorilla next to a picture of the midfielder. The paper subsequently apologised for the article, published on 14 April, saying it was unaware of Mr Barkley's heritage. The Sun's subsequent apology said that as soon as Mr Barkley's background was drawn to its attention, the article was removed from its website. The apology did not extend to other elements of the article, in which Mr MacKenzie suggested that the only people in Liverpool who could earn as much as footballers were drug dealers. Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson had called for Mr Mackenzie to be sacked over the column, describing it as a "racial slur" and a "disgrace". Mr Barkley's lawyers also made a formal complaint about the piece. At the time, Mr Mackenzie said he was unaware Barkley had a Nigerian-born grandfather and denied the column was "racist". The Sun's publisher, News UK, is part of News Corp, run by Rupert Murdoch. Ofcom is currently examining an £11.7bn bid from 21st Century Fox, also run by Mr Murdoch, of broadcaster Sky, of which it already owns 39%. The BBC's media editor said Mr Murdoch and the company hoped that by showing they were willing to sack long-standing stars they will send a signal to media regulator Ofcom that they are fit and proper to own Sky outright. Mr MacKenzie was editor of The Sun when it published a front-page article blaming fans for the 1989 Hillsborough disaster in which 96 people died. Mr Mackenzie has subsequently said that he was "completely duped" and that he was a victim of a "black" operation to smear the fans and protect the police.
A Nigerian senator has expressed outrage over the security forces' failure to prevent a second attack on a town by suspected Islamist militants. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Former Sun editor Kelvin Mackenzie is to leave the paper after making controversial comments in a column about Everton footballer Ross Barkley.
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James Boyce told the High Court in Glasgow he was getting a facial and massage at Blythswood Hotel. The 31-year-old was giving evidence at the trial of William Burns and Alexander Porter, who deny attempting to murder Ross Sherlock. Mr Boyce has been named as the gunman in a special defence of incrimination lodged by Mr Burns. Mr Burns, 56, and Mr Porter, 48, both from Paisley, deny attempting to murder Mr Sherlock by repeatedly discharging a handgun at him on 24 September 2015 at Dornoch Place and Ronaldsay Drive, Bishopbriggs. In evidence, Mr Boyce told prosecutor Richard Goddard that he went to the hotel with his partner because there was a special deal on. The jury was shown an appointments book from the spa which showed the couple checked in at 14:07. Mr Boyce: "We went earlier, there was a swimming pool, a steam room and a sauna." The court heard that Mr Boyce was interviewed by police in relation to the shooting after DNA matching his was found on a taping taken from three gun cartridges discovered at the scene. Mr Boyce was questioned and released without charge after telling detectives he had an alibi. Mr Goddard asked Mr Boyce: "It may be suggested to you you were at the shooting and you pulled the trigger, and he said: "I don't want to answer that in case I incriminate myself." He was asked if he knew Ross Sherlock and replied: "I don't want to answer that." Mr Boyce also refused to say when he was asked how DNA matching his was found on one or more of the cartridges. The jury heard that the treatments were originally booked for 15:15, but that was changed to 15:45. Defence counsel Thomas Ross, representing Mr Burns, asked who had changed the appointment and Mr Boyce replied: "I've not got a clue." Mr Ross said: "That puts the appointment back a further half hour from the shooting at Bishopbriggs," and Mr Boyce replied: "Yes." Before giving evidence, Mr Boyce was warned by judge Lord Matthews that he did not need to answer questions which might incriminate him. Mr Ross asked Mr Boyce if he remembered the murder of Kevin 'Gerbil' Carroll in 2010 and he confirmed he did. The defence counsel then asked: "Do you remember Ross Monaghan was charged with this," and he replied: "Aye, it was a big story." Mr Boyce was then asked if he knew Ross Monaghan and replied: "I don't want to answer that." Mr Ross went on: "Do you know if Ross Monaghan is friends with Ross Sherlock," and he replied: "I don't want to answer that." Earlier the court heard from forensic scientist and firearms expert Colin Murphy who said that in his opinion three shots were fired in Dornoch Place, Bishopbriggs, on 24 September 2015. Another forensic scientist Martin Fairley told the jury that a burned-out silver Volkswagen Golf which was found in Bishopbriggs shortly after the shooting had DNA matching that of Mr Porter on the driver's door handle. Defence counsel Susan Duff, representing Porter, asked Mr Fairley: "You can say there is DNA on the door handle, but you can't say when or under what circumstances it got there," and he replied: "That's correct." Mr Burns and Mr Porter also deny assaulting journalist Russell Findlay to the danger of his life at his home in the west end of Glasgow on 23 December 2015 by throwing sulphuric acid in his face. Mr Burns has lodged a special defence of alibi in relation to the attempted murder of Mr Sherlock, claiming he was working at Guinea Enviro in Maryhill, Glasgow, at the time. He has also lodged a special defence incriminating James Boyce for the shooting. The trial before judge Lord Matthews continues.
A man blamed for a murder bid outside a primary school has told a jury he was at a spa when the shooting took place.
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Broad was found guilty of dissent in breaching the International Cricket Council code of conduct on day four of the second Test against South Africa. The incident happened after the umpires had warned England captain Alastair Cook about Broad damaging the Newlands pitch by kicking it in frustration. The 29-year-old had denied the charge. Match referee Ranjan Madugalle conducted a formal hearing after Tuesday's play in Cape Town. The incident occurred in the 195th over of South Africa's innings as the hosts compiled 627-7 declared. Broad was found to have breached the ICC Code of Conduct for "showing dissent at an umpire's decision during an international match".
England fast bowler Stuart Broad has been fined 30% of his match fee after twice telling umpire Aleem Dar to "just get on with the game".
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The Department for Transport (DfT) said bidders for the new franchise must demonstrate how they would deliver more trains and more space for passengers. The current operator, Govia, wants to run the franchise again after its contract expires in October 2017. It has been shortlisted as a bidder alongside West Midlands Trains Ltd. New services will offer more than 300 extra Sunday services across the franchise by 2021, more evening trains, free wi-fi on mainline services and better ticket options for passengers who travel fewer than five days a week. A new direct peak time service between Walsall and London will also be provided. Rail Minister Paul Maynard described it as the "biggest investment in the railways since the Victorian era". The missing islands, part of the Solomon Archipelago, were not inhabited by human beings. But six other islands were found to have seen swathes of land turn into sea, destroying entire villages. The researchers say it is the first scientific confirmation of the impact of climate change on Pacific coastlines. The study, published in Environmental Research Letters, looked at 33 islands using aerial and satellite imagery from 1947 to 2014, combined with historical insight and local knowledge. It found that the archipelago had seen sea levels rise as much as as 10mm (0.4in) every year for the past two decades. The five that have vanished were all vegetated reef islands of up to five hectares (12 acres) in size that were occasionally used by fishermen but not populated. "They were not just little sand islands", leader author Simon Albert said. One of the six islands that have been heavily eroded is Nuatambu Island, home to 25 families. The research says it has lost 11 houses and half its inhabitable area since 2011. The researchers say their study is the first that scientifically "confirms the numerous anecdotal accounts from across the Pacific of the dramatic impacts of climate change on coastlines and people". However, the report stresses that the inundation does not result from rising sea levels alone. It found that shoreline recession was substantially worse in areas exposed to high wave energy, and that extreme events and inappropriate development were also factors contributing to the erosion. The Solomon Islands, a nation made up of hundreds of islands and with a population of about 640,000, lies about 1,000 miles north-east of Australia. Some communities are already adapting to the changed conditions. Several Nuatambu islanders have moved to a higher neighbouring volcanic island, the study said. Other people were forced to move on the island of Nararo. One of them, 94-year-old Sirilo Sutaroti, told researchers: "The sea has started to come inland, it forced us to move up to the hilltop and rebuild our village there away from the sea." Taro, the capital of Choiseul Province, is set to become the first provincial capital to relocate residents and services.
A new West Midlands Rail (WMR) franchise will accommodate another 20,000 passengers in London and Birmingham at peak times. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Five tiny Pacific islands have disappeared amid rising seas and erosion, Australian researchers say.
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The man approached the 18-year-old women and made a lewd comment towards them during the incident on the B9112 road at Aberdargie. The incident took place at about 16:30 on Wednesday. The suspect was described as of dark-skinned Asian appearance, about 30 years old, with short dark hair, and stubble. He was formally dressed, wearing a baggy white shirt, bow tie and dark dress trousers.
Police are hunting a man wearing a bow tie who indecently exposed himself to two teenagers near Perth.
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Images of a future king and queen demonstrating their sporting, competitive edge have proved irresistible to many British newspapers and broadcasters. But such coverage doesn't mean that royal fever has descended on India. Security concerns in the modern world mean that presidents and princes travel in a bubble, and only meet those who are invited and checked out in advance. Those who have cleared those hurdles appear to have enjoyed the experience. This after all is the son of Princess Diana and his wife. Hers is a name that still resonates. And William and Kate are personable people capable of putting those they encounter at their ease. They'll continue to do this as they travel across India. Some they meet will fall, briefly, under the spell of a royal meeting; but they won't cast a spell over the whole country. The fast food chain said like-for-like revenue rose by 3.5% in the three months to September. Shares in the company rose after it beat analysts' forecasts of a 1.5% increase in revenue. McDonald's is in the process of a major turnaround plan after a sustained period of falling sales. Areas such as the UK, Australia, Canada and Germany performed strongly over the quarter and increased like-for-like sales by 3.3%. McDonald's also raised sales in the US, which it said was suffering from "industry softness". China weighed on its "high-growth" markets, which include countries such as Russia, because of strong comparative sales and "protests related to events surrounding the South China Sea". However, it made gains and like-for-like sales in its high-growth markets rose 1.5%. Steve Easterbrook, president and chief executive of McDonald's, said: "Looking ahead, we are focused on growing global comparable sales and serving more customers while being mindful of the near-term challenges in several markets." The company has introduced a number of initiatives to attract customers, including adding new items its all day breakfasts, including biscuits, McMuffins and McGriddles. Neil Saunders, chief executive of Conlumino, the retail research and consultancy group, said one of the challenges McDonald's faced was widening its appeal. He said: "While the menu changes have drawn in more customers, they have not completely reinvigorated the brand with younger consumer segments, many of whom still shun the chain in favour of what they see as more premium and satisfying offerings from players like Shake Shack." The Irishwoman saw off the ex-IBF super-featherweight challenger in Manchester to remain unbeaten in the professional ranks after four fights. Taylor, 30, had Bulgarian Koleva on the canvas in the seventh round. "I definitely needed the eight rounds and it was a great contest against a very strong opponent," said Taylor. The Bray boxer had won two of her first three professional fights inside the distance and always looked in control against Koleva on Saturday night. The fight was on the undercard of Anthony Crolla's world lightweight title rematch against Jorge Linares. Taylor's last victory was on 4 March, when she stopped Italian Monica Gentili. Taylor's promoter Eddie Hearn is hopeful of landing a world title fight by the end of the year. The London 2012 Olympic champion won six European titles and five world crowns during a distinguished amateur career, before turning professional in October.
One Mumbai newspaper headline has declared "Royal couple charms crowds". [NEXT_CONCEPT] McDonald's has reported better-than-expected sales during the third quarter, lifted by the UK and an improved all-day breakfast menu. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Katie Taylor continued her progress towards a world title shot by beating Milena Koleva on points in an eight-round super-featherweight contest.
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The offences are alleged to have taken place between October 2013 and February 2014 in the Crawley area. The group are denying 14 charges in total, including rape and sexual assault against two girls, aged 13 and 15 at the time. The six will now stand trial on 11 January 2016. The defendants are: The number of non-voters exceeded the number of votes cast for the winning party in more than half of UK constituencies in 2015. The West Midlands dominates the top end of English constituencies where non-voters most outnumbered winning parties. Northern Ireland had the most untapped potential from non-voters in the UK. The Electoral Reform Society said many people feel their vote does not count. Sorry, your browser cannot display this content. Enter a postcode or seat name The BBC England Data Unit analysed the 2015 general election and found: Three seats in Stoke-on-Trent, two in Birmingham, West Bromwich West and Walsall North all returned Labour MPs, yet between 13,000 and 17,000 more people failed to cast a valid vote than voted for the winner. In some cases, the winning majority was small. In Walsall North, for example, Labour won in 2015 by less than 2,000 votes. Yet more than 30,000 eligible voters did not choose a candidate. In the UK overall, Northern Ireland contained constituencies where the untapped potential of non-voters was even higher. In South Antrim, 18,960 more people did not vote than voted for the winning Ulster Unionist Party MP. East Londonderry and Upper Bann, won by the Democratic Unionist Party, also had about 17,500 more non-voters and spoiled papers each than votes for the winning MP. Only in 48 constituencies would the number of non-voters and spoiled papers added to the second-placed candidate not have been enough to change the result. The seat safest from the untapped power of non-voters in 2015 was that of Theresa May, who went on to become prime minister in July 2016. See the figures for your constituency on this interactive map. Katie Ghose, the chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society, wants to see an end to the traditional "first past the post" voting system. She said: "Despite our flawed voting system, it's vital that everyone gets out there and uses their hard-fought right to vote. Voting does make a difference, and wherever people are they should have their say. The point is to make the voice of voters even stronger. "Nonetheless, we know that many people stay at home because they don't feel like their vote would count. "And of course, millions voted for smaller parties where their votes simply didn't translate into representation. That has a huge impact on public faith in our democracy, and does Parliament and politics a huge disservice." The first past the post system is seen by its supporters as simple, because the person with the most votes wins. Former Prime Minister David Cameron, who campaigned against changing the voting system in 2011, described it as "cheap to administer and with little bureaucracy". Simon Woolley, a director of campaign group Operation Black Vote, said: "A vote is more than just a choice. It's leverage. It's demanding the change you want to see. You cannot tell me that voting does not make a difference." What do you want to know about the general election? Send us your questions in the form below: Jamie Acourt, 39, from Bexley, is wanted by officers for drugs offences. A Met Police spokesperson confirmed Mr Acourt was wanted "in connection with an investigation, namely, conspiracy to supply drugs". It is alleged that Mr Acourt is part of a gang, with links to London and the North East, accused of supplying large amounts of cannabis worth millions. Mr Acourt has always denied involvement in the killing of 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence, who was stabbed to death in 1993, in Eltham, south-east London. In 2012 Gary Dobson and David Norris were convicted of Stephen's murder and given life sentences.
Three men and three boys have pleaded not guilty to charges relating to child sexual exploitation in Sussex. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Non-voters would play a pivotal role in the general election if they were to use their vote, analysis suggests. [NEXT_CONCEPT] One of the original suspects in the Stephen Lawrence murder inquiry is on the run from police.
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The 21-year-old, signed from Manchester United in August, has made 12 appearances for a Black Cats side that are 19th in the Premier League. He was injured during his side's 3-0 win over Hull City on Saturday. "We won't see him again this season and all we can hope is getting him right for the start of next season," said Sunderland boss David Moyes. "I think he'd just started to find his way in the Premier League - even though he had experience at Manchester United - and the games he was having were bringing him on and giving him confidence." The injury means McNair is unlikely to feature in Northern Ireland's World Cup 2018 qualifier against Norway in March. These so-called "prohibited" subsidies are considered the most serious form of anti-competitive practice as they require an undertaking from the company in receipt of them to promise not to operate in other jurisdictions. You can have the money if you promise you won't open plants elsewhere - in this case even in another US state. This particular subsidy was offered by Washington State - home of Boeing's vast Everett and Renton plants - and covers the development of its wide bodied 777X aircraft. Previous examples of this kind of ruling usually require immediate repayment - a sum that by some estimate could approach $9bn, a figure Boeing itself, however, hotly disputes. Boeing has previously called for an Australian company, found to be in receipt of similar prohibited subsidies, to be forced to immediately repay them, but it's unlikely it will take such a hard line on itself. This marks a victory for Airbus in a war without end. Back in September the European aerospace giant, which employs 15,000 people in the UK, was on the receiving end when it was found that billions of euros in low interest loans amounted to illegal subsidies. Boeing celebrated that moment as a comprehensive victory which would deal a mortal blow to Airbus and result in more US jobs. The reality is that neither of these companies can exist without government subsidies. The development costs of new aircraft are just too big, and the risks and rewards too great, for governments to stay out of it. Boeing gets money from NASA and the US Department of Defence; Airbus from very, very cheap government loans. For years this was the case and an uneasy truce reigned over the world aerospace market throughout the 1990s and beyond. Then, in 2004, all hell broke loose and the lawyers on both sides have been at each others throats for 12 years - a nice little earner for them. Could the end of this legal gravy plane be in sight? Perhaps. It's not just the US and Europe who are at it. Canada's government subsidises Bombardier, and then there is the biggest threat to the Airbus and Boeing duopoly. It is called Comac, the state-funded Chinese plane maker with the world commercial aviation market its number one target. Its recent wide bodied aircraft combine features of both the Boeing 777 and Airbus A350 and caught many eyes at a recent airshow in China. Perhaps this potential common enemy will one day prompt Boeing and Airbus to bury the hatchet. The world's longest running and costliest trade dispute does shed some interesting light on the workings of the World Trade Organization. This is a body the UK may get to know a bit better in the coming months and years if the UK leaves the EU without striking a replacement trade deal. The big lesson is this: disputes take years, are rarely conclusively settled, and do not take the heat out of international trade disputes.
Sunderland defender Paddy McNair will miss the rest of the season because of a cruciate knee ligament injury. [NEXT_CONCEPT] In a landmark trade ruling, the World Trade Organization will this afternoon find Boeing has illegally benefitted from billions of dollars from the most anti-competitive type of subsidy.
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The Championship side say "talks are ongoing to conclude the deal" for the 27-year-old Scot, who joined Konyaspor on a three-and-a-half-year deal from Polish side Lech Poznan last year. Douglas began his career in his native Scotland with Queen's Park, before moving to Dundee United in 2010. The Glasgow-born left-back has never been capped at international level. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Wolves have "agreed a deal in principle" to sign defender Barry Douglas from Turkish club Konyaspor.
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The pair are accused of offences under the Proceeds of Crime Act. Brenn Walters and Terri Robinson, both from Enfield, are due to appear before Westminster magistrates later this month. Nine people already charged in connection with the heist have appeared in court. Police said a further three individuals, a man and two women, have also been interviewed under caution. Mr Walters, 43, also known as Ben Perkins, of Manor Court, and Ms Robinson, 35, of Sterling Road, are due to appear in court on 27 August. Items believed to be worth more than £10m were taken in the raid at Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company in London's jewellery quarter over the Easter weekend. Thieves broke into the vault and ransacked 73 safety deposit boxes. Arrests followed in May and June after police raided addresses across London and Kent.
A man and woman have been charged in connection with the Hatton Garden safety deposit box raid at Easter, the Metropolitan Police have said.
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The judgement, released by the High Court, details frantic efforts by authorities in the UK and Moldova to stop Asif Malik and Sara Kiran taking their four children into the Syrian warzone. The account reveals how officials initially tried and failed to persuade the family to return voluntarily after they were apprehended. Senior judge Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division, said he had released the judgement because it was an example of the system working quickly to protect children. In April, Asif Malik and Sara Kiran left their home in Slough, Berkshire, with their four children, who are aged between 20 months and seven years old. They left without warning, crossed the English Channel at Dover and were heading south-east across the continent when police launched a public appeal. Thames Valley Police warned the family could go to Syria - but publicly stressed they had no specific evidence they were joining the self-styled Islamic State. On 20 April, Turkish police found the family and detained them - but after days of attempts to persuade the family to fly home voluntarily, senior judges were asked to intervene. According to the judgement, early on 4 May, the family's local council, which is legally responsible for keeping children safe from harm, sought an urgent application to make the children wards of court. As is usual in such circumstances, a duty judge heard the case by telephone. In its submission, the council said: "On the basis of the information the police and South East Counter Terrorism Unit has been willing to share, there are reasonable grounds for believing that this family left Slough in order to join Islamic State in Syria. "If that is right, the parents chose to expose their children to obvious risks." British social workers were preparing to fly to Turkey to intervene, but it then emerged that Mr Malik and Mrs Kiran were planning to leave for Moldova. Why they chose Moldova remains unclear - although the small country lies across the Black Sea from Turkey. "It appears that the family is… 'in flight' from the UK," the council's barrister told the judge. "It does seem to us that in view of the parents' obvious refusal to return to the UK, a proportionate response is to seek their urgent co-operation with an assessment in order that their plans for the children may be clearer to us, and about which reasoned decisions may be taken." BBC News has compiled a database of people from the UK who have travelled to support or fight for jihadist organisations in Syria and Iraq. It includes the stories of: The judge made the children wards of court. But despite that order the family pressed on, prompting Phil Batson, the British ambassador in the capital Chisinau, to get involved. By lunchtime, he and his team had an assurance from a top official in the Moldovan prime minister's office that its security forces would help the UK. Knowing this could be the last chance to intervene, social services lawyers, sought a second court order to stop the family going any further once they had arrived in Moldova. With less than an hour before the family were due to arrive in Moldova, Sir James Munby made a new order, formally asking Moldova to stop the family, while warning the parents they faced jail if they did not comply. The judge added: "This is a case where all the evidence would strongly suggest that until they were stopped by the Turkish authorities these young children, who are, of course, completely under the control of their parents, were intended by their parents to go through the middle of a war zone." By midnight, the family were in Moldovan detention - and their passports in the hands of British officials. Mr Malik and Mrs Kiran were described as "completely co-operative" and the children "safe and well". The family returned home on a flight the next day - and since then the children have remained wards of court while social workers work out the next steps. Their passports remain under official lock and key.
An unusual judgement from the family courts has revealed a race against time to stop a family heading to join so-called Islamic State.
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The £850,000 Marine Lake in Clevedon, funded by Heritage Lottery, included work to reinforce and raise the seawall and de-silt the lake bed, for the first time in 80 years. The work has also included improving access to the lake and a water play area for children. Marine Lake opened in 1929 and was once a huge visitor attraction, but fell out of favour in the 1960s. Marine Lake Ranger Jo Tasker said the lake would gradually fill up with high tides expected next week and "people need to take care in and around the seafront". North Somerset Councillor Peter Bryant said: "It will secure the long-term future of this historic landmark and shows what can be achieved by local organisations and people working together." The official opening of the lake will take place in April to coincide with the anniversary of its original opening. In that time, the club appointed a new coaching team and also had an overhaul of the playing squad. Gloucester also won the European Rugby Challenge Cup, the club's first silverware for four years. Profit on ordinary activities before taxation was £286,026, while the club's long-term debt was also reduced by 18%. The club increased turnover by 21.3% over the previous year and the footprint of the stadium was also increased with the purchase of the former Cooper Cowan car site. "It's been a really good year, it's been a very tough year," managing director Stephen Vaughan told BBC Gloucestershire. "In business parlance our costs have gone up dramatically in the past 12 months, so we've had to work even harder to keep a self-sustainable model. So I'm really pleased we've been able to do that when we've invested not just in the playing department, but have also bought a big chunk of land at Kingsholm for work in the future out of working capital." The club also held two successful concerts at their Kingsholm Stadium home in the summer, with over 26,000 people watching Madness and Elton John perform. Gloucester are controlled by Ryan Walkinshaw, who took over following the death of his father Tom - a former Formula 1 team owner - in 2010. They have been owned by the Walkinshaw family since 1997 but are currently looking for new owners. "We are still talking to people," added Vaughan. "Have we found the people that are right? not yet. I'd like to be in a position in the next six to eight weeks where I would like to say categorically we've either got a new direction or we are comfortable how we are."
A water attraction has reopened after a six-month restoration project. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Gloucester Rugby have recorded an operating profit for the fifth straight year, for the period up until 30 June 2015.
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Danus Skene stood against Lib Dem Alistair Carmichael in the 2015 General Election. He also stood for the Shetland Islands seat in recent Holyrood elections, losing out to Lib Dem Tavish Scott. Robbie McGregor, convenor of the Shetland branch of the SNP, said Mr Skene would be sorely missed. He died in London.
An SNP parliamentary candidate for the Orkney and Shetland area has died at the aged of 72.
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Jesse Richards, originally from Gloucester, died at Cleeve Prior in Evesham, Worcestershire, on 31 July 2009. Five men were jailed in 2012 over the death of the 40-year-old father-of-three, who lived in Surrey, but his body was never recovered. West Mercia Police said they believe his remains were taken to Warwickshire. A £10,000 reward is on offer for anyone with information that leads to the recovery of the body. Lucy Richards said she hoped someone would come forward and help find her son. "If they could for one minute put themselves in my place they would know the heartache I am feeling and have felt for the last seven years," she said. Supt Mark Loader, from West Midlands Police, urged people to "consider the pain" the Richards family endures. He said: "His killers have been brought to justice for their crimes. However, his family continue to suffer and we want to give them the opportunity to lay Jesse to rest."
The mother of a man who was murdered in a row over a drug debt seven years ago has appealed for help to find his body.
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With talks between London Underground (LU) and the unions at an impasse and showing little sign of progress, are there now further signs the idea of a Night Tube is withering? Previously London Mayor Boris Johnson has said the Night Tube could not be at "any cost" and today he told LBC Radio the weekend service was not "absolutely critical". Asked whether he could provide a date for the introduction of the 24-hour Tube, Mr Johnson said: "I've got to tell you this is something that the city of London has done without for 150 years. What I won't do is pay an unreasonable price for it, which Londoners would feel in their fares. "There's a very good deal on the table. I just hope that members of the Tube unions will get a chance to look at it. No-one will work more hours than they do today. Drivers have the same number of weekends as now. "I want you to know that this is something I think we should have but - I hope my attitude is clear - it is not something that I regard as absolutely critical." That is arguably a further shift away from a policy announced with much fanfare alongside the closure of ticket offices two years ago. Compared to the policy of closing ticket offices the differences are stark. LU forced those closures through even though the unions didn't want the changes. With the Night Tube it depends on the agreement of those same unions, but it cannot force the changes through without drivers. There also doesn't seem to be a sense of uproar from anyone that the plans for the Night Tube now seem to be in disarray; there is no start date and there seems to be political apathy around the whole idea. Of course there is much bluff and bluster during these talks, but it does makes you wonder if it'll ever happen? The fire broke out at about 20:20 BST on Friday, at Charles Trent Yard in Poole, Dorset, the fire service said. Plumes of smoke could be seen for miles, and 60 firefighters brought the blaze, which gutted 170 vehicles, under control at about 05:00 BST. Dorset Police assisted in securing the area and there are no reports of any casualties, investigators are looking into what caused the blaze. David Honeybell, from Nottingham, also accepted posting "revenge porn" photos of his wife on Facebook, but was not charged with a revenge porn offence. Instead, he was charged with arson for burning the clothes and harassment for a series of abusive texts, phone calls and voice messages. The 49-year-old pleaded guilty. He told Nottingham Magistrates' Court he was "upset and sorry" for setting fire to his wife's clothes on 4 June, as well as harassing her by sending 18 text messages and leaving six voicemails on 16 June. The naked photos were mentioned at the previous court hearing but not at his sentencing. When asked outside of court about the posting of naked photos of his wife he said he could not justify it. "I can't now, obviously," he said. "When you think back on what you've done you shouldn't have done it. "It was just impulse, it was a thing, when you get angry you just do things off the cuff." He and Sarah Honeybell, who had been married for 23 years, are now divorcing. On the day he harassed her with the texts and phone calls, he wrote on his Facebook wall that he was "Off to see the rozzers" as he had "burnt her clothes, put naked photos of her on the Internet". After admitting arson and harassment in court on 8 July he posted a newspaper article about the case on his Facebook wall and wrote "Famous" in the caption underneath. The Crown Prosecution Service was asked to comment on why Honeybell was not charged with a revenge porn offence. A spokesperson said: "The charge of harassment without violence was pursued because it gave the court sufficient sentencing powers for the full extent of David Honeybell's offending. "The CPS also took into account the needs expressed by the victim for the case to progress through the court expeditiously. "As a result of the approach taken, the defendant pleaded guilty without the need for the victim to give evidence." The restraining order and community order will both apply for a year.
Is London's weekend Night Tube plan dying? [NEXT_CONCEPT] More than 150 cars have been destroyed in a major blaze at a scrapyard. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man who set fire to his wife's clothes after discovering she had been having an affair has been given a community order and restraining order.
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According to initial reports, a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a hotel near the police district in Lahore's Qila Gujjar Singh area. Several vehicles parked near the site of the blast caught fire and gunshots could be heard from within the police district. A splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban said it carried out the attack. Jamaat-ul-Ahrar [The Party of Freedom Fighters], which split from the Pakistani Taliban in August, is a territorial group of militants from Pakistan's Mohmand tribal region headed by Omar Khalid Khorasani, says the BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad. Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed the attack was in response to the recent executions of some of the group's members by the Pakistani government. The group is understood to have carried out several previous attacks on Pakistani targets, including the beheading of 23 paramilitary soldiers in February 2014. Lahore city police chief Captain Mohammad Ameen Wains said Tuesday's attack appeared to have been caused by a suicide bomber who had intended to blow himself up inside Lahore's police headquarters but had "blasted himself prematurely". He said several other people had been injured and five or six vehicles damaged. The shots heard nearby were fired by security personnel following the blast, the Dawn website reported. Lahore is one of Pakistan's most liberal cities and has seen relatively few attacks in recent years. Pakistan has suffered two major militant attacks in the last month. At least 60 people were killed in an attack on a Shia mosque on 30 January in the southern province of Sindh, and a Taliban attack on a Shia mosque in the city of Peshawar on last Friday killed 20. East Kilbride reached the landmark at the weekend with a 4-2 victory over Vale of Leithen. The run started back in March, with a win over Whitehill Welfare. Manager of the Lowland League side Martin Lauchlan said the achievement was fantastic , while Ajax called the feat a "great job". The amazing run has brought praise and attention from across the football world, but the club's status may not see it being officially recognised. Lauchlan told BBC Scotland's Off The Ball programme: "For part-time players it's a terrific record, it's not just unbeaten - it's wins, the boys have been fantastic for me since I took over. "We can only beat what's in front of us, I'll let other people argue if it's going to be recognised or not, we'll just keep the run going. It's the old cliché, we've played one game at a time and we've done very well." The game that sealed the 26-match run went down to the last five minutes and saw East Kilbride come back from 2-1 down. Lauchlan added: "The ultimate aim is to get into the top flight of Scottish football, there's 80,000 people in East Kilbride so I think they deserve a football team. "We're just going to try our best this season, we've started extremely well, the record's great, but at the end of the day we've not won anything yet." The Guinness record for most consecutive association football victories was set at 26 by Ajax, between 3 October 1971 and 29 March 1972. The team comprised players including Johan Cruyff, Johan Neeskens and Piet Keizer. The 27-year-old's stay with the fourth-placed Canaries will include any potential Championship play-off games. Dorrans has played eight times since joining the Canaries on an initial one-month deal in February. "He's got a football brain, he can get about the pitch, he's physically strong and can carry out a variety of roles within the team," said boss Alex Neil. "He's very versatile, which is ideal for a manager."
At least four people have been killed in an explosion in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Dutch football giants Ajax have paid tribute to East Kilbride FC for equalling their world record run of 26 consecutive wins. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Norwich City have extended the loan of West Bromwich Albion midfielder Graham Dorrans until the end of the season.
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But on the streets of Arab East Jerusalem, some young Jewish people are up to more than just graffiti. They are part of what has become known as "price-tag gangs" and they are risking their safety to send a very political message. Price-tagging is the term they use for a range of acts, from vandalism to arson attacks and religious desecration. They carry out these crimes as an act of revenge. Primarily, they are warning their own government that there is a price to pay for any attempt to give what they believe is Jewish land to the Palestinians as part of the fragile peace process. But they also say there is a price to pay by Arabs for attacks on Jews. The price-tag gangs come from the hilltops of the West Bank, Arab territory that has been occupied by Israel since the war of 1967. Israeli homes built on occupied land are illegal according to international law, though Israel disputes this. Israel regards the West Bank as territory whose final status is yet to be determined and has built 120 settlements here - around 300,000 Israelis now live in the West Bank, excluding East Jerusalem. But there are also 100 small outposts scattered on strategic hilltops some of which are illegal under Israeli law because they are built on private Palestinian land. The hills are the battle ground for the hilltop youth - price tagging is their calling card and they have sworn to sacrifice all to prevent this land being given to the Palestinians. Moriah Goldberg is one of them. The 20-year-old was captured on CCTV in February in a Palestinian village. She slashed open sacks of building materials, cars were sprayed with graffiti saying "revenge" and insulting the Prophet Muhammad. Moriah, who is under house arrest in the ultra nationalist Israeli settlement of Tapuach, in the West Bank, did not deny her actions. "A 'price tag' means that when the government of Israel decides to evict a settlement, an outpost, even the smallest wooden shack in the land of Israel - it has a price. Maybe it will make them think twice before they do it again." The Israeli government's move to label some of the price-taggers' behaviour as acts of terrorism does not faze her. "Faithless Jews who don't fear God can call me a terrorist if they want. I don't care what they say about me. I only care what God thinks. I act for him and him alone." Graffiti is not the only hallmark of the price-tagger. There has been violence and intimidation: Arab cars have been hit by petrol bombs and people seriously injured. Security cameras caught the torching of trucks in Palestinian villages and - perhaps most worrying for the security situation - there have been arson attacks on mosques in the West Bank and Israel. One of the most provocative price tags so far was in February in the Palestinian village of Burka, where the mosque was attacked, prayer mats were burnt, insults sprayed and war declared on the walls. The Israeli authorities say they are determined to put an end to this and orders have gone out to the police and security services. Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu, said the price-taggers would be stopped. "If these extremists succeed - if you have, heaven forbid, a mosque or something goes up in smoke, this could promote extremism on their side and you could have a terrible impact. We've got to stamp these phenomena out." Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian Authority's Prime Minister, is blunt in his assessment of their actions: "Certainly at least in some aspect of what those violent settlers commit - there's hardly any other way of describing it other than outright terrorism." Israel's security forces are increasingly caught in the middle and the army has become a target of the hilltop youth as tensions rise. One of the few price-taggers caught and successfully prosecuted is Alex Ostrovsky, 27, who was imprisoned for damaging vehicles in a military base. He is blunt in his view of his country's security forces and police who carry out the demolition of illegal outposts. Then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer "If someone destroys my home I don't care if he's Arab or Jew. As far as I'm concerned he destroyed my house and therefore he's my enemy: a terrorist, a freedom fighter - depends where he is, who he's with. It's all the same thing. If calling me a terrorist helps me stay in my homeland, they can call me a terrorist." Amid the price-tagging and tension over Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank, peace talks with the Palestinians aimed at establishing two states side-by-side, are frozen. For the Palestinians, the continuing growth of the settlements - 50,000 new residents in the last three years - remains the biggest stumbling block. Salam Fayyad said the price-tagging and delays over moves to evict settlers from illegal outposts are taking a toll on the peace process. "I see the viability of what remains of the two-state solution... giving way under the heavy weight of that settlement enterprise and associated violence." For its part, Israel has formed a new taskforce to combat Jewish acts of extremism and says negotiating the future of the settlements will have to be part of the peace talks which they are ready to begin, without preconditions. Regardless of what happens to the peace process the government knows it has to tackle the enemy within before Jewish militancy spirals out of control. Panorama: Price Tag Wars, BBC One, Monday, 17 September at 20:30 BST and then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer.
With their hoodies, covered faces and cans of spray paint, they may in some ways look like average teenage vandals out for a night of trouble.
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His relatives and supporters condemned the decision, saying they wanted proof that it was his body. The High Court said it lacked jurisdiction over the case. Seen by many as Africa's Che Guevara, Mr Sankara was hastily buried after being killed during a 1987 coup led by incumbent President Blaise Compaore. The anti-imperialist revolutionary became president in 1983 after an internal power struggle and led his country for four years. The court's ruling was greeted with outrage and contempt by Mr Sankara's relatives and supporters, reports journalist Chris Simpson from the capital, Ouagadougou. Campaigners say the family never had the chance to identify his body before he was buried in the capital's Dagnoen cemetery. About 100 people protested outside court, chanting "down with the Burkinabe judiciary" and "when will the Burkinabe people know the truth?", AFP news agency reports. Mr Sankara was killed by a group of soldiers at the age of 37. Public interest in Mr Sankara remains high in Burkina Faso, with opposition group demanding answers about his death, correspondents say. Family lawyer Benewende Sankara said he would appeal against the decision. "We are not happy," AFP quoted him as saying. President Compaore has so far refused to agree to Mr Sankara's exhumation, and has always denied being involved in the ex-leader's killing, Chris Simpson reports. Mr Compaore insists the "facts are known" and he has "nothing to hide", he adds. When Thomas Sankara took power in 1983 he changed the West African state's colonial name of Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, which means "the land of upright men". His supporters say he was incorruptible, unlike many other African leaders. Mr Sankara was seen as charismatic and wore a beret, leading to comparisons with the Latin American revolutionary Che Guevara. Many taxis across West Africa still have a round sticker of him on their windscreens.
A court in Burkina Faso has refused to rule on a request by the family of ex-President Thomas Sankara for his body to be exhumed for DNA tests.
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The Haxey Hood event is contested by patrons of pubs in the neighbouring villages of Haxey and this year's winner Westwoodside. The Hood, a leather tube about one metre in length, is pushed in a scrum until it reaches one of four pubs. The contest, which includes the Smoking of the Fool, is held annually on the Twelfth Day of Christmas. The tradition started when Lady de Mowbray was out riding between Westwoodside and Haxey - between Gainsborough, Scunthorpe and Doncaster - when her silk riding hood was blown away by the wind. She is said to have been so amused to see local farm workers chasing it she rewarded them land - on condition the chase would be re-enacted every year. The story says the worker who caught the hood was too shy to approach her and handed it to a fellow worker to return. It is said Lady de Mowbray thanked the man who returned the hood and said he had acted like a lord. The worker who caught it was labelled a fool. Part of the event involves the Fool giving a speech, during which a fire is lit close by - this is known as the Smoking of the Fool. There is also a procession around participating public houses, The Carpenters Arms in Westwoodside, and the Kings Arms, The Loco and the Duke William, all in Haxey. The main event starts when the hood is thrown into the middle of the scrum, or sway, as it is known locally. The sway pushes through the villages, with each team trying to direct it towards their pub. The contest, which can last for hours, ends when the Hood is touched by the landlord of the winning team's pub.
A mass rugby-style game dating back to the 14th Century has been won after hours of play.
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New MPs for Witney, in Oxfordshire, and Batley and Spen, in West Yorkshire, will be chosen on Thursday. Former Prime Minister David Cameron, who stood down as an MP after quitting Downing Street, is being replaced in Witney. The by-election in Batley and Spen was prompted by the death of Labour MP Jo Cox, who was shot and stabbed in Birstall in June. Mrs Cox won the seat with a majority of 6,057 in 2015, while in Witney, the Conservatives are defending a majority of 25,155. Polls in both constituencies opened at 07:00 BST and will close at 22:00 BST. The BBC weather forecast for both constituencies is largely the same, with no rain predicted and a top temperature of 13C. Here is a full list of the candidates standing, in alphabetical order by surname: Corbyn Anti - By Election Protest Tracy Lynn Brabin - Labour Party Jack Buckby - No to terrorism, yes to Britain Richard Charles Edmonds - National Front David Furness - British National Party Local People First Therese Hirst - English Democrats: 'Putting England First!' Waqas Ali Khan - Independent Garry Mervyn Kitchin - Independent Ankit Love - One Love Party Henry Edmund Burke Mayhew - Independent (The Conservatives, Green Party, Liberal Democrats and UKIP are not fielding a candidate) Emilia Arno - One Love Party Dickie Bird - UKIP David Bishop - Bus-Pass Elvis Party Robert Courts - Conservative Party Duncan Enright - Labour Party Mad Hatter - Official Monster Raving Loony Party Lord Toby Jug - The Eccentric Party of Great Britain Adam Knight - Independent Elizabeth Leffman - Liberal Democrat Winston McKenzie - English Democrats Helen Salisbury - National Health Action Party Larry Sanders - Green Party Daniel Skidmore - Independent Nicholas Ward - Independent The unnamed woman was held on suspicion of causing grievous bodily harm by officers probing allegations of abuse at Rosecroft Residential Home in Bromley. Five other women have been arrested in connection with the allegations. All six, aged between late-20s and mid-50s, were bailed until February. The residential home cares for elderly people who need nursing care, including those with dementia, physical disabilities and sensory impairment. The Metropolitan Police said the investigation involved a number of alleged victims whose ages ranged from their mid-70s to mid-90s. Det Con Vicki Thomson said: "Although the incidents we are investigating are alleged to have taken place this year, I am keen to hear from former employees of the care home including agency staff who were employed as far back as 2007." Olivia Colman and David Tennant are back as DS Ellie Miller and DI Alec Hardy, this time investigating the rape of a woman in the fictional Dorset town. She's played by former Coronation Street actress Julie Hesmondhalgh. Jodie Whittaker and Andrew Buchan return to play Beth and Mark Latimer, along with Arthur Darvill as local vicar Paul Coates. Other cast members include Lenny Henry, Georgina Campbell, Sarah Parish, Charlie Higson and Mark Bazeley. The first episode, shown on Monday night, drew 7.5 million viewers. That fell slightly short of the first episode of series two, which launched in 2015 to 7.6 million. The debut episode of the first series, shown in 2013, pulled in 6.8 million. Here's what the TV critics had to say about the start of the new series. Read the full reviews from the Daily Mail, The Independent, the Daily Express, the Telegraph, The Times (subscription required) and the Radio Times. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected].
Voters are going to the polls in two Westminster by-elections. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A sixth woman has been arrested by police investigating alleged assaults on pensioners at a south-east London care home. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Broadchurch is back for its third and final series - and has gone down well with TV critics.
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Passengers at Heathrow, Gatwick and London City airports had to be checked in manually and faced long queues and delays. BA said the fault was resolved at about 09:00 BST and its computerised system was now operating normally. It comes after a power cut led to hundreds of flights being cancelled over the May bank holiday weekend. A spokesman for BA said: "We are sorry for the temporary check-in problems which caused some delays for our customers first thing this morning. "This issue is now resolved and our staff are working flat out to help customers get away on their holidays." The problems in May resulted in an IT failure and the cancellation of more than 670 flights from Heathrow and Gatwick. BA later said it was caused by an engineer who disconnected a power supply. Meanwhile, passengers flying from EU airports have been warned they may face long queues over new security checks brought in after recent terror attacks.
British Airways has apologised for a "temporary" problem with its check-in systems at some UK airports.
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Anthony Tomlinson said Alison Wilson decided to act because a baby was being "swung round" as the child's mother rowed with Stephen Duggan in Widnes at about 23:20 GMT on 7 March. He told Liverpool Crown Court seeing that so late at night was "strange". Duggan, 28, of Runcorn, denies murder. Mr Tomlinson, who was travelling in a taxi with Ms Wilson when the pair saw the argument, said Duggan and the woman were "tussling" over the baby's car seat. "One was trying to take the car seat off the other. It was not gentle pushing," he said. The jury heard he paid the taxi driver as Ms Wilson intervened and "did not feel threatened at all" as he got to the scene, where the mother-of-two was pushing Duggan away from the woman. He said that without warning, he was then hit over the head. "I think I was knocked unconscious straightaway. I remember I was lying on the floor and I came round. My first thought was for Al." Visibly upset, he said the 36-year-old was "standing with her hand on her neck", adding that she had "a look of shock on her face". "I told her to keep the pressure on it. I didn't think it was bad it as it was." Ms Wilson was taken to Whiston Hospital, but died there six days later. Mr Tomlinson required plastic surgery on his head wound. The court also heard from the woman who Duggan was arguing with, who cannot be named for legal reasons. She said they had become involved in a "tug-of-war" over the car seat after the pair had left a gathering at his father's house. She told the court the pair and Ms Wilson all had hold of the car seat at one point, before the baby fell out and Duggan punched the woman in the face. Asked what then happened to Ms Wilson, the woman said she "just saw her hit the floor", but added that she did not see if Duggan was holding anything. The 28-year-old has admitted assaulting the woman, but denies murdering Ms Wilson, wounding Mr Tomlinson and causing actual bodily harm to the baby. The trial continues.
A woman who was killed after she stepped in during a street row between her alleged murderer and woman with a baby intervened because "it didn't seem right", her friend told a court.
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Contador pulled out of the Tour during Sunday's ninth stage and says his recovery will take four weeks. The Olympic road race begins on 6 August. "To reach them in optimal condition looks like it will not be possible," said Contador. He is now targeting the Vuelta a Espana on 20 August for his comeback.
Spain's Alberto Contador has ruled himself out of the Rio Olympics after injury forced him to withdraw from the Tour de France.
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Data lost in such attacks could be recovered or wiped, suggests a new report from the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission. It says lost sales and fixing hacking damage have cost US firms tens of billions of dollars, with trade secrets being given to Chinese companies. The commission is typically very critical of the Chinese government. The report, which is due to be released on Wednesday, describes the American response to hacking attacks on domestic firms as "inadequate" and says the US is "ill-prepared" to defend itself from cyber-espionage. "The Chinese government appears to believe that it has more to gain than to lose from its cyber-espionage and attack campaign," says the report. "So far, it has acquired valuable technology, trade secrets, and intelligence. "The costs imposed have been minimal compared to the perceived benefit. "The campaign is likely to continue and may well escalate." China has frequently denied involvement in hacking attacks such as the data breach that affected the government's Office of Personnel Management (OPM). Information on more than 22 million federal employees was affected and the White House is reported to be preparing a retaliation against China. Sean Sullivan, security adviser at information security firm F-Secure, said: "This report about investigating the ability to hack back I think is less about Congress wanting the ability to hack back and more about clarifying, 'These are the rules, this is the line - you cross this line, this is the retaliation you will get.'" Mr Sullivan told the BBC, however, that there might be problems with such an approach. For one thing, data may not just be breached in the future, but covertly manipulated. Such alterations might not be noticed for many weeks or months after the incident. And when manipulations or breaches are detected, it might be very hard to attribute the attack to a specific Chinese competitor or state actor, Mr Sullivan added. "We can point towards Chinese IP addresses but we don't have a good idea as to which party within China was motivated and did the hacking," he said. Still, "normalising" the practice of back-and-forth cyber-attacks might clarify the situation and "give people a firmer handle on international norms and what they should expect", according to Mr Sullivan.
The United States should think about allowing US companies to "hack back" if data is stolen by Chinese hackers.
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He has also been fined £100,000 and ordered to attend a Football Association education course. Shelvey, 24, had a personal hearing to challenge the charge after an incident with Wolves' Moroccan midfielder Romain Saiss in 17 September's 2-0 defeat. The player has seven days to appeal. Newcastle said in a statement they will wait to see the FA's written reasons "before making any further comment on the matter". The FA's sanctions will be set aside pending consideration for an appeal. Newcastle were losing to Wolves in their Championship match at St James' Park, when in the 87th minute an incident occurred between Shelvey and Saiss. The breach, according to the FA's charge against the former Liverpool and Swansea player, related to Rule E3(1), and was an "Aggravated Breach as defined in Rule E3(2), as it included reference to ethnic origin and/or race and/or nationality". BBC Sport's Pat Murphy said the matter was brought to referee Tim Robinson's attention by one of Saiss' team-mates immediately after the game. If Boxing Day's visit of Sheffield Wednesday becomes the first game of the suspension, the England international will miss four league games and the FA Cup third-round tie at Birmingham. Newcastle boss Rafael Benitez would next be able to name him in the squad for the Championship game against Rotherham on 21 January. FA guidelines, which were revised in 2013, state any player found guilty of racially abusing an opponent or discriminating on religion, sexuality or disability, should be banned for at least five games. Prior to that, Chelsea's John Terry was handed a four-match ban and a £220,000 fine for racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand, while Liverpool's Luis Suarez received an eight-match suspension and a £40,000 fine for his abuse of Manchester United's Patrice Evra - both in 2011. In an editorial in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, three international experts said it was time to "bust the myth" about exercise. They said while activity was a key part of staving off diseases such as diabetes, heart disease and dementia, its impact on obesity was minimal. Instead excess sugar and carbohydrates were key. The experts, including London cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra, blamed the food industry for encouraging the belief that exercise could counteract the impact of unhealthy eating. They even likened their tactics as "chillingly similar" to those of Big Tobacco on smoking and said celebrity endorsements of sugary drinks and the association of junk food and sport must end. They said there was evidence that up to 40% of those within a normal weight range will still harbour harmful metabolic abnormalities typically associated with obesity. But despite this public health messaging had "unhelpfully" focused on maintaining a healthy weight through calorie counting when it was the source of calories that mattered most - research has shown that diabetes increases 11-fold for every 150 additional sugar calories consumed compared to fat calories. And they pointed to evidence from the Lancet global burden of disease programme which shows that unhealthy eating was linked to more ill health than physical activity, alcohol and smoking combined. Dr Malhotra said: "An obese person does not need to do one iota of exercise to lose weight, they just need to eat less. My biggest concern is that the messaging that is coming to the public suggests you can eat what you like as long as you exercise. "That is unscientific and wrong. You cannot outrun a bad diet." But others said it was risky to play down the role of exercise. Prof Mark Baker, of the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence, which recommends "well-balanced diets combined with physical activity", said it would be "idiotic" to rule out the importance of physical activity. Ian Wright, director general at Food and Drink Federation, said: "The benefits of physical activity aren't food industry hype or conspiracy, as suggested. A healthy lifestyle will include both a balanced diet and exercise." He said the industry was encouraging a balanced diet by voluntarily providing clear on-pack nutrition information and offering products with extra nutrients and less salt, sugar and fat. "This article appears to undermine the origins of the evidence-based government public health advice, which must surely be confusing for consumers," he said.
Newcastle United midfielder Jonjo Shelvey has been banned for five games after he was found guilty of using racially abusive language by an independent panel. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Physical activity has little role in tackling obesity - and instead public health messages should squarely focus on unhealthy eating, doctors say.
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The banknote, which will enter circulation in the next three to five years, currently features the economist Adam Smith. The Bank is asking the public for suggestions of artists ranging from painters to furniture makers. But the Bank will want to avoid a repeat of previous equality complaints. It faced criticism after the planned replacement of campaigner Elizabeth Fry on the £5 note with Winston Churchill, which left it facing the prospect of no women being used on banknote images. This was solved when author Jane Austen was announced as the image on the next £10 note. The public will be asked to nominate an artist to be considered for the banknote. They can include painters, fashion designers, sculptors, ceramicists, furniture makers, photographers and film-makers. This will then be considered by a committee which, taking into account worthiness, equality and diversity, will whittle down the list to between three and five. The final decision will then be made by the governor of the Bank, Mark Carney. Her appeal comes as homeless volunteers are mourning the recent death of a homeless man on the streets of Belfast. As a volunteer for Belfast charity The Welcome Organisation, 84-year-old Sister Olive Cooney spends her days washing clothes and sleeping bags for the homeless. Speaking to the BBC's The Sunday News programme, she said the government could do more to help them. "It makes me feel very very sad to think there are people out there who would have nobody to love them, to care for them," said Sr Olive. "It touches my heart." She explained that her hope, in washing their clothes and bedclothes, is that she might encourage the homeless to feel a sense of dignity, which could convince them to get back on their feet. Paying tribute to homeless man Jimmy Coulter, who died earlier this month, Sr Olive described him as "a lovely person - full of life, full of beans". Mr Coulter, who was in his mid-thirties, died in a doorway in Donegal Place in Belfast city centre. "I was just devastated - couldn't believe it, because he came from a very good family. "But really and truly, it doesn't matter what your family circumstances are. If you're going to go that road, you're going to go that road anyway." The Belfast nun said she encounters "a whole range of people" on the streets, "be they in their teens, right up to quite elderly people", but that they tend to be mostly male. "Some will come and disclose how they ended up in the street - it might be through domestic violence, domestic circumstances, addiction in the home. "They think this is the best place for them - to just get out." In other cases, she said, unemployment can play a part. "And possibly foreigners coming over, looking for work and not finding it, then not having enough money to get back home." Laughing at the affectionate comparisons to Mother Teresa, Sr Olive stressed that she was not in the same league as the revered nun, but admitted it was flattering. "I was very humbled, because I certainly wouldn't classify myself in the same plane as our venerable, blessed Mother Theresa. "But it gave me a sense of pride that people appreciate what I do." Although voluntary organisations work hard to address the homeless problem in Northern Ireland, Sister Olive believes it is time for the government to step in with financial support. "There are so many organisations out there helping the homeless. I think the government really should now up their efforts to help the homeless," she said. You can hear Sr Olive's interview in full on The Sunday News, BBC Radio Ulster, at 13:00 on Sunday, 20 February.
The image of a visual artist will appear on the next version of the £20 note - and the Bank of England wants the public to make nominations. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Belfast nun, known affectionately as Mother Teresa by the homeless people she helps, has added her voice to calls for more to be done to help those who sleep rough.
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The injured pair, in their 70s, are from the Bedford area and were hurt at about 10.30 BST on South Marine Drive near Bridlington Spa, East Yorkshire. They are being treated at Hull Royal Infirmary, said Humberside Police. The car driver, who is in his 50s and from Cyprus, has been treated for minor injuries at Scarborough Hospital. Humberside Police is looking at the possibility the driver could have become unwell at the wheel and have appealed for witnesses.
Two people have been airlifted to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, after being hit by a car that mounted the pavement.
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A survey found around one thousand tonnes of plastic floating on the surface, mainly fragments of bottles, bags and wrappings. The Mediterranean Sea's biological richness and economic importance means plastic pollution is particularly hazardous, say Spanish researchers. Plastic has been found in the stomachs of fish, birds, turtles and whales. Very tiny pieces of plastic have also been found in oysters and mussels grown on the coasts of northern Europe. "We identify the Mediterranean Sea as a great accumulation zone of plastic debris," said Andres Cozar of the University of Cadiz in Puerto Real, Spain, and colleagues. "Marine plastic pollution has spread to become a problem of planetary scale after only half a century of widespread use of plastic materials, calling for urgent management strategies to address this problem." Plastic is accumulating in the Mediterranean Sea at a similar scale to that in oceanic gyres, the rotating ocean currents in the Indian Ocean, North Atlantic, North Pacific, South Atlantic and South Pacific, the study found. A high abundance of plastic has also been found in other seas, including the Bay of Bengal, South China Sea and Barents Sea in the Arctic Ocean. Commenting on the study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, Dr David Morritt of Royal Holloway, University of London, said scientists were particularly concerned about very small pieces of plastic (less than 5mm in length), known as microplastics. The study found more than 80% of plastic items in the Mediterranean Sea fell into this category. "These very small plastic fragments lend themselves to being swallowed by marine species, potentially releasing chemicals into the gut from the plastics," Dr Morritt, of the School of Biological Sciences, told BBC News. "Plastic doesn't degrade in the environment - we need to think much more carefully about how we dispose of it, recycle it, and reduce our use of it." The Mediterranean Sea represents less than 1% of the global ocean area, but is important in economic and ecological terms. It contains between 4% and 18% of all marine species, and provides tourism and fishing income for Mediterranean countries. "Given the biological wealth and concentration of economic activities in the Mediterranean Sea, the effects of plastic pollution on marine and human life could be particularly relevant in this plastic accumulation zone," said Dr Cozar. Follow Helen on Twitter.
Large quantities of plastic debris are building up in the Mediterranean Sea, say scientists.
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Rooney's representatives have spoken to Chinese Super League club Tianjin Quanjian but talks did not progress. However, the 31-year-old England captain's departure in the summer is looking increasingly likely. "He's not in the team, but he shouldn't write off his United career," ex-Reds defender Neville told BBC Radio 5 live. "I don't see Wayne Rooney playing football in China, I really don't. "He's a home bird. I think he likes living in the north-west, and I can't see him taking his young family out to live in China. Yes, it's for vast amounts of money, but I just don't see it at all." United's record goalscorer, who joined the Old Trafford club in 2004, has scored five goals in 29 appearances for the Reds this season, providing 10 assists. He has started only three games since 17 December and was left out of the squad for Wednesday's Europa League match at Saint-Etienne because he has just returned to training after a hamstring strain. United beat the French club 1-0 to seal a 4-0 aggregate win and book their place in the last 16. They next play Southampton in the EFL Cup final at Wembley on Sunday. "I'm not going to give Rooney advice, but what I would say to him is: 'Stick it out at Manchester United,'" said Neville, who won 10 major trophies with United between 1995 and 2005. "At the moment, he's not in the team and has got a slight knock but Henrikh Mkhitaryan has gone off injured tonight. "You never know, he could come on in the final on Sunday and make a massive impact, score, and then finish the season so well, you've seen it so many times." Earlier this week Mourinho refused to give any guarantees about whether Rooney would still be at the club after the Chinese transfer window closes on 28 February. But the BBC's Simon Stone said the expectation is that Rooney will stay for the rest of the season.
Wayne Rooney should stay at Manchester United and work to reclaim his place in Jose Mourinho's starting XI, says former team-mate Phil Neville.
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Robert Hinz, of Bournemouth, said he tried to help three-month-old Julian, who had suffered fatal head injuries. The baby died at Southampton General Hospital on 9 April 2016, Winchester Crown Court heard. Mr Hinz, 34, of Carysfort Road, denies murder and three counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent. The court has heard the pair were alone together at home while Julian's mother Monica was out shopping. Julian was later found with severe skull fractures and died in hospital the following day. He was killed in "a few moments of anger and violence" when he was "thrown or swung into something hard", prosecutors have told Mr Hinz's trial. Taking the stand, Mr Hinz said: "I do not remember what happened in the bedroom but I didn't murder my son. "He wasn't breathing when I picked him up, he was floppy. "I started to do resuscitation, blowing in his mouth, pressing on his chest." Mr Hinz denied he often lost his temper but admitted he had damaged his flat when the paramedics arrived. He said: "I took out my frustration on the door and the wall". The jury previously heard Julian had also sustained fractured ribs on previous occasions, which the prosecution said would have been caused by "squeezing". The trial continues.
A man accused of murdering his baby son, who died after being "thrown or swung into something hard", did nothing to hurt him, a court heard.
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Evans, on Cooley Rorkes Drift, shed tears of joy after a routine that incurred 37.2 penalties. Australian Christopher Burton, with Graf Liberty, leads on 32.9, with German Ingrid Klimke on 37.2 on board Horseware Hale Bob. No British riders came close to breaking into the top 10. Alexander Bragg and Tom McEwen lie in equal 18th going into Saturday's cross-country. Reigning Olympic champion, world number one and Badminton title holder Michael Jung, meanwhile, lies ninth on La Bioesthetique Sam, seven penalties adrift of Burton. Day one leader Thibaut Vallette of France is seventh. But Evans was the story of the day, and the 45-year-old called Cooley Rorkes Drift "the horse of a lifetime". Find out how to get into equestrian with our special guide. No Irish rider has won at Badminton since Major Eddie Boylan triumphed on Durlas Eile in 1965. "This is very special, and I can't believe it," said Evans. "You try not to look at the scoreboard, but when I halted at the end of the test and got some nines among the marks, I thought, 'oh, my God'. "It hasn't sunk in, and it won't sink in. If I am still in this position on Sunday night, it will mean a huge amount." Badminton standings after the dressage 1. Christopher Burton (Aus) (Graf Liberty) 32.9pens 2. Ingrid Klimke (Ger) (Horseware Hale Bob Old) 36.4 3. Jonty Evans (Ire) (Cooley Rorkes Drift) 37.2 4. Karin Donckers (Bel) (Fletcha Van T'Verahof) 37.3 5. Lauren Kieffer (USA) (Veronica) 38.0 5. Andrew Nicholson (NZ) (Nereo) 38.0 7. Thibaut Vallette (Fra) (Qing Du Briot Ene HN) 38.7 8. Bettina Hoy (Ger) (Designer 10) 39.2 9. Michael Jung (Ger) (La Biosthetique Sam FBW) 40.0 10. Astier Nicolas (Fra) (Piaf De B'Neville) 41.5
Jonty Evans raised hopes of a first Irish winner of the Badminton Hose Trials in 52 years after ending the dressage in third place.
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First came the tragic news last Wednesday that two elderly French tourists had died on a guided snorkelling trip at Michaelmas Cay, a popular tourist spot about 40km (25 miles) north-east of Cairns, in Queensland state. They reportedly had pre-existing medical conditions, and suffered cardiac arrests. Two days later, a 60-year-old British man died in unclear circumstances while scuba-diving at Agincourt Reef, also in Far North Queensland. By the weekend, three more men - one of them aged 68 - were also dead after separate snorkelling and scuba-diving incidents in Tasmania, New South Wales and Victoria. Their deaths are still being investigated. The incidents have prompted Graham Henderson, president of the Australian Underwater Federation, to call for a review of safety standards for scuba-diving courses. He said increased health screening for older divers should be considered. "Having that number of deaths is really unusual. I've never seen it happen before," said Mr Henderson, whose organisation is the government-recognised body for amateur underwater activities in Australia. "I think realistically, for older divers from the age of 65 onwards, I think it would be worth having a medical every two years." Mr Henderson said the diving community was ageing as people came back to the sport later in life. "People can be certified 20 years before and in some of the [certifying] organisations there is no process for renewal," he said. However, others such as Mike Holme, head of quality management at Padi Asia Pacific, deny there is any issue with safety standards. Padi is a global provider of scuba-diving training and certification. "There's a self-screening medical statement that every open-water diver student needs to complete," Mr Holme said. "Any dive operator will always ask a diver when they last dived and would generally ask for proof of currency. "If it has been more than two years, they will ask that they do a refresher course or what we call a re-activation course. "We are always telling our divers to refresh their skills and re-activate. We also tell them if they have any medical conditions that have changed since their last dive, to go and talk to their doctor about it." The executive director of the Association of Marine Park Tourism Operators (AMPTO), which represents the tourist industry in the Great Barrier Reef, also rejected any issue with current standards. But Col McKenzie said older people should be aware of the risks associated with either snorkelling or scuba-diving. "We are the most regulated diving and snorkelling industry anywhere in the world. We're also the safest," he said. "The reality is that as customers get older we will have more deaths, not less. "All we can do is make sure we have the correctly trained staff to deal with it as best we can. "When you're two hours off shore and you have a heart attack the outcome is not good unless we can get a helicopter to you," Mr McKenzie said.
Despite six snorkelling or scuba-diving deaths in Australia last week, tourism and certification operators are rejecting a call for a safety review, reports Ben Collins.
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Syrian-born swimmer Ibrahim Al Hussein and US-based Iranian discus thrower Shahrad Nasajpour will compete as part of the Independent Paralympic Athletes (IPA) team. It is the first time in the history of the Paralympics that a dedicated team of its kind will compete. Their Chef de Mission will be British official Tony Sainsbury. Leg amputee Al Hussein, who is based in Greece and will race in the men's 50m and 100m freestyle S10 events, said: "I have been dreaming of this for 22 years. "I thought my dream had gone when I lost my leg but now it is back for real. I want to send a message to all those injured that they too can achieve their dreams." Nasajpour will compete in the F37 discus event. The pair will stay in the Athletes' Village alongside more than 4,350 athletes from 165 countries. And, for official presentations such as medal and village welcome ceremonies, the Paralympic Anthem will be played. Sainsbury, a five-time GB chef de mission added: "These athletes will help to raise awareness of the plight of thousands of refugees and asylum seekers who make difficult decisions and journeys, often with impairments."
Two refugee Para-athletes will compete at the Rio Paralympics, which begin on 7 September.
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Ms Hogg, who is currently the Bank's chief operating officer, will succeed Minouche Shafik, who is leaving the Bank at the end of February. Her role will cover responsibility for the Bank's bond-buying programme. In a separate announcement, the Bank said that Monetary Policy Committee member Kristin Forbes would be leaving the committee at the end of June. Ms Forbes is an external member of the MPC, the committee which sets interest rates. The Bank said she would be returning to her career as an academic in the US. Among the MPC members she has been more sceptical of the Bank's huge stimulus programme, and on Tuesday said that interest rates might need to be raised soon. "Kristin Forbes leaving the MPC could modestly dilute the possibility of interest rates rising sooner rather than later - although much will obviously depend on who replaces her on the MPC," said Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight. During her career, Charlotte Hogg has also worked at consultants McKinsey, US bank Morgan Stanley, credit agency Experian and Santander UK bank. Announcing her new role at the Bank, Chancellor Philip Hammond said: "I'm confident that her exceptional leadership skills and wide-ranging experience make her the right person to take on the position. "Charlotte has done an excellent job as the Bank's first chief operating officer. She will take over this new role at a key time for the City." Bank of England governor Mark Carney said: "Many of the top priorities in Markets and Banking currently coincide with those of the Bank's central operational areas, meaning Charlotte is the ideal person to lead these efforts. "Charlotte's breadth of financial sector and operational experience will contribute valuable, broader perspectives to the Bank's policy committees." Britain's Murray and Brazilian Soares upset the world number one pairing 7-5 4-6 6-3 at Flushing Meadows. They will play Spain's unseeded Pablo Carreno Busta and Guillermo Garcia-Lopez in Saturday's final. Murray and Soares won the Australian Open title in January - their first Grand Slam tournament together. The Scot, 30, has now reached the final in four of his last six Grand Slam events, and two of four since teaming up with Soares at the start of 2016. Murray lost to Herbert and Mahut in last year's US Open final when he was playing with Australian John Peers, and asked what he had learned from that experience, he said: "Don't lose. It's not much fun to lose in finals. "We've had a great tournament so far. We'll give it our very best to try to win - it would be a great end to the week." Soares, 34, added: "I'm very proud, they're a very tough team. "They're the best team this year, defending champions, playing an amazing level, but I thought we did extremely well. "We served well and I think we played really well under pressure, which at this stage of the tournament is important." Carreno Busta and Garcia-Lopez beat fellow Spaniards Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez 6-3 7-6 (7-4) in the second semi-final.
Charlotte Hogg has been appointed as the Bank of England's new deputy governor for markets and banking. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares beat defending champions Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut of France to reach the US Open doubles final.
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The Fermanagh and South Tyrone MP said he provided a statement about a man who was convicted of benefit fraud. However, the politician insisted he did not make a character reference. Clive Miller, a former soldier from Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, claimed housing benefit while he owned properties in Spain. He got income support despite having more than £280,000 in his bank accounts and was overpaid almost £40,000 in benefits between 2002 and 2010. Miller was was given a suspended jail sentence at Dungannon Crown Court on Monday. The court heard that his legal team had a reference from "an esteemed source" which spoke "glowingly of his work in the voluntary sector". Mr Elliott said he is not sure if he is the esteemed source referred too. However, he said he did provide a statement about Mr Miller but insisted it was not a character reference. He told the BBC: "I confirmed that I knew him. That is what I was asked. I knew him in the context of him coming to me with constituency issues." The MP also declared: "I did take the step of writing to the judge to let him know this was not a character reference, in case there was any doubt about it " Mr Elliott now intends to take the matter further, saying: "Obviously I will be taking it forward with the lord chief justice." He added: "I would have concerns if that simple acknowledgment or answering the question that I confirmed I knew the person is taken as a reference ". Miller, of Coleshill Crescent, admitted four charges of failing to declare a change of circumstances to the Social Security Agency. Two charges of money laundering were left on the books. The judge sentenced 47-year-old Miller, to 12 months in prison, suspended for two years. Four other male officers suffered less serious injuries during the attack in Plowright Close in Sheffield at about 19:50 BST on Wednesday. A man was later arrested nearby on suspicion of attempted murder and remains in custody. The female officer sustained "multiple serious injuries" in the attack. More on this and other local stories in South Yorkshire Witnesses said the female officer was injured inside a maisonette, before a man fled to the Co-op and started throwing stock at staff and customers. Neighbour Simon Ellis, 46, who went to help the officer, said she told him she feared the attacker would kill her. Mr Ellis said he had noticed two officers running up the stairwell in his block of flats and then a woman resident emerged. "She said [her boyfriend had] lost his mind, the aliens were chasing him and he was trying to kill the police officers that I'd just seen running up the stairs," he said. "As she did so, the lady police officer, who's been injured the most, came half-staggering, half-falling out of the stairwell pursued by this big bloke, this bodybuilder, with an axe. "It was a frenzied attack, chopping at her with the axe." A force spokesman said the officers were responding to a "domestic incident" in Plowright Close where they found the man with the axe. "The PC and a second male officer were injured as they made attempts to arrest the man," he said. "Then three other officers, all men, were also injured as they arrested the man, in his 30s, inside the Co-op store, in Blackstock Road." Deputy Chief Constable Dawn Copley said: "The officers who attended in Gleadless last night were faced with an extremely dangerous situation and showed immense bravery dealing with a violent individual." Dr Alan Billings, South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner, added: "This is the second incident in this area within a few days. "Fortunately, in both cases arrests have been speedily made and the public at large is not in danger. The community has also rallied round." On Tuesday, a woman was stabbed to death at her home in Gleadless Valley. A man has been charged with her murder.
The Ulster Unionist MP Tom Elliott is to contact the lord chief justice over how comments he had made about a benefits cheat were used in court. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A police officer suffered serious injuries when she was injured by a man, reportedly armed with an axe, police said.
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Barca play Real Sociedad, Real Madrid face Celta Vigo and Atletico Madrid meet Eibar in three ties involving two La Liga teams. Alcoron, the only non top-flight team left, have been drawn against Alaves. The first legs will take place on Wednesday and Thursday, with the return fixtures a week later. Barca, who fought back from a first-leg deficit to beat Athletic Bilbao in the last 16, are aiming to become the first team since 1953 to win three consecutive Copa del Reys. Full draw: Real Sociedad v Barcelona Alcorcon v Alaves Atletico Madrid v Eibar Real Madrid v Celta
Holders Barcelona have avoided Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid as Spain's big three clubs were kept apart in the Copa del Rey quarter-final draw.
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Smyth clinched a fourth world title in the T13 100m, winning his final in emphatic fashion against a marginal head wind in a time of 10.63 seconds. Glengormley runner McKillop was well clear of the field in 2:00.93 to continue his dominance of the T38 800m. The pair will also take in the 200m and 1500m respectively later in the week. World record holder Smyth, from Eglinton, came home ahead of Polish sprinter Mateusz Michalski, who was second in 10.95. Brazilian Gustavo Henrique Araujo was disqualified for a false start but the field got away cleanly at the second attempt. Chad Perris of Australia took third behind Smyth and Michalski in 10.96. The County Londonderry man will compete in the 200m heats on Monday evening, with the final on Tuesday night. The visually-impaired athlete was a double Paralympic gold medallist at the same stadium in 2012 and has a career best of 10.22 seconds in able-bodied competition and a world record of 10.46 for Paralympic competition. Smyth, who recently turned 30, has been unbeaten at Paralympic level since beginning his international career at the 2005 European Championships. Since 2012, the Eglinton man's track times have been slowed by injury but he has remained far too good for the opposition at Paralympic level - most recently last year's Rio Games when he took a third successive 100m gold. Defending champion McKillop ran a good tactical race to maintain his unbeaten run in the 800m, bettering his time in the heats by almost seven seconds. Australian Deon Kenzie, leader at halfway, was second in 2:02.15, with Saidi Abbes of Tunisia clinching bronze in 2:02.38. Canada's Liam Stanley, the fastest qualifier, was denied a medal when he fell to the track just short of the finishing line. McKillop, who also won two gold medals in London five years ago, will defend his T37 1500m title on Saturday 22 July.
Ireland athletes Jason Smyth and Michael McKillop secured gold medals at the World Para-athletics Championships at London Stadium.
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On Friday night, Cyclone Promotions boss Barry McGuigan revealed on Twitter that they had signed up for the fight, which will take place in New York. Frampton is aiming to become the first Northern Ireland boxer to win world titles at different weights. In February, he beat Scott Quigg in a super-bantamweight unification bout. It saw the 29-year-old add the WBA belt to the IBF title he already held. However, he was later stripped of the WBA crown because he did not agree to a defence against mandatory challenger Guillermo Rigondeaux. On the same night as the Frampton v Quigg clash in Manchester, Santa Cruz defended his WBA featherweight title against Spain's Kiko Martinez. Mexican Santa Cruz, 27, is a three-weight world champion and is undefeated in his 33 professional contests. The medication prevents new infections by killing the virus before it has a chance to take hold in the body. Calculations, published in the Lancet, indicate giving the drugs to the most at-risk men could cut new infections by more than 40% in the UK. Experts said the approach was of "huge benefit" to at-risk men and should be adopted. Men who have sex with men are at high risk of contracting HIV. In London, one in eight gay men has HIV, while the proportion in the rest of the UK is one in 26. While condoms are an effective barrier to HIV transmission, messages to use them are often ignored. Last year, a UK test on 500 men assessed the impact of an alternative approach called pre-exposure prophylaxis (Prep). It indicated one case of HIV could be stopped for every 13 men given anti-HIV drugs for a year. Scientists at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine modelled the impact of introducing such a treatment across the UK. They estimated there would be 16,955 new cases of HIV in gay men by 2020. But giving Prep to the most sexually active 25% of gay men would prevent 7,399 infections (44%). Dr Narat Punyacharoensin, one of the researchers, said a focus on regular HIV tests and condom use "have been falling short". He told the BBC News website: "Prep has a great potential to achieve a level of prevention that could never be achieved by all other HIV interventions." He said the cost-effectiveness still needed to be determined, but "pre-exposure prophylaxis offers a major opportunity to curb new infections and could help reverse the HIV epidemic among men who have sex with men in the UK". Concerns had been raised that men given the drug would adopt riskier behaviours including stopping using condoms. But the test on 500 men, which concluded last year, found no difference in levels of other sexually transmitted infections such as chlamydia. Prof Sheena McCormack, who led that study at the Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit at UCL, told the BBC: "[It] demonstrated a huge benefit from adding Prep to the existing risk-reduction package for men who have sex with men. "This publication endorses the impressive longer term impact that Prep could have on the HIV epidemic among men who have sex with men in this country, and hopefully will guide NHS England towards a favourable decision." Dr Michael Brady, the medical director of the Terrence Higgins Trust, said: "This study is really important as it demonstrates that, in a relatively short space of time, Prep could have a dramatic impact on reducing HIV transmissions." The NHS is evaluating whether Prep should be offered. Follow James on Twitter.
Carl Frampton has agreed to a showdown with world featherweight champion Leo Santa Cruz in the summer, according to the Belfast boxer's management team. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Giving daily HIV drugs to healthy gay men has huge potential to help reverse the epidemic, say scientists.
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CAR President Francois Bozize reportedly asked the neighbouring country for help after his own army failed to repeal the attack. The rebel coalition accuses Mr Bozize of failing to comply with the terms of a peace treaty signed in 2007. The CAR has had a series of rebellions and coups since independence in 1960. In the process, Chad has intervened several times in CAR, the BBC's West Africa correspondent Thomas Fessy reports. The nation helped Mr Bozize when he took power nine years ago and again in 2010, when he was fighting some of the rebel groups who are now on the offensive again. The Seleka rebel coalition - formed by breakaway factions of three former armed groups - accuses the president of not honouring a ceasefire deal pledging the release of political prisoners and payment for fighters who lay down their arms. The alliance has threatened to overthrow the government if Mr Bozize fails to enter discussions. About 20 vehicles of heavily armed Chad soldiers crossed into CAR on Tuesday to help stop the rebel advance taking place only 300km (185 miles) from the capital, Bangui, our correspondent says. The alliance now controls the towns of Ouadda, Sam Ouandja and Ndele, a major route linking the CAR to Sudan, Cameroon and Chad. On Tuesday morning, it also captured the diamond mining town and military base of Bria. Government troops tried to repel the attack launched at dawn, but were later forced to retreat. Around 15 soldiers are reported to have been killed during the clashes. "We couldn't stand there doing nothing in front of this rebel advance," a senior government official told the Reuters news agency. "The president contacted his counterpart in Chad, who immediately agreed to help us put a quick end to this adventure." In the last two weeks, the rebels have stepped up their offensive against government military positions. Mr Bozize has been in power since leading a coup in 2003 and winning the elections in 2005 and 2011. The 2007 accord with his government led to rebel forces being integrated into the army. But some of the rebels have since deserted and taken up arms again. The CAR is rich in mineral resources, including gold and diamonds, but its population is extremely poor.
Chad has sent troops to the Central African Republic (CAR) to fight rebels who have seized Bria, a key mining town in a diamond-rich region.
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The Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument will become the largest network of oceanic protected areas in the world. The memorandum bans commercial fishing, deep-sea mining and other extraction of underwater resources in the area. Environmental campaigners welcomed the move although some critics say President Obama could have done more. "This really is a matter of stewardship. It's also a matter of generational responsibility," said US Secretary of State John Kerry. "We have a responsibility to make sure... the future has the same ocean to serve it. Not to be abused, but to preserve and utilise." The Pacific Remote Islands Area consists of seven scattered islands, atolls and reefs that lie between Hawaii and American Samoa. The waters that surround these islands are home to corals, seabirds, sharks and vegetation not found anywhere else in the world. President George W Bush set up the marine preserve in 2009 but until now it only encompassed an area 50 nautical miles (92km) from the islands' shores. Now the protected area is being expanded to 200 nautical miles from the unique atolls. It will cover 490,000 sq miles (1.2m sq km) - an area roughly three times the size of California. Mr Obama first signalled his intention to expand the monument in June and asked for comments on the final boundaries from fishermen, lawmakers and scientists. Environmental groups greeted the announcement and said they hoped it would spur other nations to take similar steps. "The president acted expeditiously, while the area is still largely pristine and undisturbed," said Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council. However, some critics say the expansion falls short of what Mr Obama could have done had he used the full extent of his powers. The islands affected are divided into five regions and the expansion only involves three of them. If Mr Obama had expanded the preserve in all five regions he could have protected more than 780,000 sq miles, some environmentalists say. Lee Bo, a British citizen, was widely believed to have been abducted and taken to mainland China late last year along with four of his colleagues. China was accused of violating Hong Kong's judicial independence. The men worked for a publisher Mighty Current which sold gossipy books critical of China's leaders. They all went missing late last year. Mr Lee denied being kidnapped during an interview on state Chinese television. However, his supporters believe the TV interview was done under duress. Mr Lee's colleagues, Cheung Jiping, Lui Bo, Gui Minhai and Lam Wingkei, appeared on Chinese state TV in February, saying they had been detained for "illegal book trading". Mr Lee returned to Hong Kong on Thursday, where he asked police to drop the missing persons case on him. On Friday morning, smiling nervously, he told journalists he would not publish books anymore, and asked them not to bother him or his family. He said he could travel freely between Hong Kong and the mainland, before being escorted into a car that drove him to mainland China, local media reported. When asked if he had been taken to China by security agents, Mr Lee said "it's not convenient for me to say". China expert Willy Lam, from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told AFP news agency: "The fact of the matter is that he has not really been fully released... he needs to report back to China." Mr Cheung and Mr Lui returned briefly to Hong Kong earlier this month, but were also reportedly returned to the mainland as part of their bail conditions. Mr Lee's disappearance from Hong Kong in December sparked an international outcry. Under Hong Kong law, Chinese police do not have jurisdiction in the territory. Many suspected he had been abducted because he had not taken his travel document, which is necessarily for cross-border travel, with him, and the Hong Kong authorities said they had no record of his having crossed into the mainland. The UK has said Mr Bo was probably "involuntarily removed" to China, calling it a "serious breach" of the handover treaty that undermined the principle of "One Country, Two Systems". 1. Lui Bo, general manager, goes missing in Shenzhen, 15 October 2. Cheung Jiping, business manager, 32, goes missing in Dongguan, 15 October 3. Gui Minhai, co-owner, 51, goes missing in Thailand, 17 October 4. Lam Wingkei, manager, 60, last seen in Hong Kong, 23 October 5. Lee Bo, shareholder, 65, goes missing in Hong Kong, 30 December
US President Barack Obama has signed a memorandum to expand a vast marine reserve in the Pacific Ocean. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Hong Kong publisher who went missing for nearly three months is reportedly back in mainland China - a few hours after returning to Hong Kong.
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The health board admitted it was unable to meet the Scottish government's target timescale and has started classifying adult elective surgical patients according to their clinical need. NHS Grampian has suffered from difficulties in recruiting and retaining staff in several areas. But it says the current approach is a "pragmatic" one while waits are longer than it would like. A spokeswoman for the health board said: "Our first priority is to ensure the most urgent patients get treated promptly. "Therefore we are in the process of implementing an elective classification system to ensure those patients waiting longer are those clinically most able to do so. "The classification is clinically-led and covers all adult surgical services. We realise this will be disappointing news for those patients classed as able to wait longer. "We remain committed to all Scottish government waiting times standards. This is a pragmatic interim solution to maintain safety whilst current waits are longer than we would like." Health Secretary Shona Robison told BBC Radio Scotland the Scottish government was investing in health boards across the country to help them build their theatre capacity. Interviewed on Good Morning Scotland, she apologised to patients who have had a long wait for elective surgery. "It's not ideal," she said. "We would want all patients to be seen in a timely fashion and I would apologise to anybody who is having to wait a bit longer than we would want them to wait. "But I think it is important that the capacity that we do have is used to treat those patients who most urgently need to be treated. "What the new investment will mean going forward is that we can make sure that everyone is treated in a timely fashion and we can get those who are waiting longer than they should seen as quickly as possible." Ms Robison said NHS Grampian has struggled to recruit theatre nurses and it has had difficulties with theatre capacity, but the health board was working to address the problems. "What they are doing is they're changing the whole way the theatres are operating to try and make sure that they can use the theatre capacity to the best of their ability," she said. "They've managed to recruit a lot of new theatre nurses and they're using their capacity in a more efficient way and reducing their agency spend by recruiting nurses to substantial posts. So they are doing a lot of work to try and address some of these issues that they have." Prof Jamie Weir, spokesman for the local Patient Action Coordination Team (PACT), told BBC Scotland: "I think it's very sad from the point of view of the patients. "Not knowing is very difficult to cope with. And the staff do not want to be in this position, to have patients waiting, under stress and strain." He added: "There is no quick fix." Media playback is not supported on this device The Lions produced a dominant display to thrash the Maori 32-10, a week before the first Test in Auckland. Hansen, whose side beat Samoa 78-0 on Friday, said Gatland was "running out of time" to change his style before the two meet on 24 June. "I'm a bit surprised by Steve Hansen who is normally calm," said Gatland. "He's been doing a lot of press conferences and I can only take that as a sign of respect in that he is a little bit worried," the Kiwi said. Hansen has been vocal in his views on the Lions and hinted there may be a split in the Lions camp over the coming weeks, something Gatland says will not happen. "We've been written off, and it's brought us closer together as a group," Gatland said. "The harmony and the boys singing in the changing rooms, and what it means to them in terms of the whole squad, we're very, very close. "If Steve Hansen knows what's going on from outside, then he's a much better man than I am."
NHS Grampian has said it cannot guarantee that patients will be given surgery within 12 weeks of diagnosis - unless it is an urgent case. [NEXT_CONCEPT] All Blacks coach Steve Hansen is "a little bit worried" going into the upcoming Test series, says Lions counterpart Warren Gatland.
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High Court judge Chinembiri Bhunu said prosecutors would be informed. His comments came as Mr Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party lost two court cases relating to the disputed 31 July election. The Constitutional Court said President Robert Mugabe's re-election was "free, fair and credible". Mr Mugabe won with 61% of the presidential vote against 34% for Mr Tsvangirai. The two had been part of power-sharing government formed in 2009 under pressure from regional leaders following elections the year before marred by violence and allegations of rigging. The Constitutional Court made its ruling on Tuesday despite the MDC withdrawing its case last Friday, alleging it would not get a fair hearing. A guide to rigging allegations The MDC's separate case before the High Court seeking full details of the results from the electoral commission was also dismissed on Tuesday. Justice Bhunu said the High Court did not have the jurisdiction to rule on the matter, adding the case had no merit because of the applicant's "gross conduct in soiling the dignity and integrity of this court". Mr Tsvangirai, who served as prime minister in the power-sharing government, had said there was little difference between the judiciary and Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party as judges had been appointed while he was in office without him being consulted, as required by law. Such "scathing and disparaging remarks concerning the entire judiciary of this country" would be referred to either the attorney general's office or the National Prosecuting Authority for them to consider pressing contempt of court charges, Justice Bhunu said. Mr Mugabe's defence lawyer, Terrence Hussein, told the BBC: "This is serious, the expectation is that the relevant authorities will look into the case." Mr Mugabe, 89, is due to be inaugurated for another five-year term on Thursday. The MDC said that more than a million voters were prevented from casting their ballots - mainly in urban areas considered to be its strongholds, allegations backed up by a 7,000-strong group of local observers, the Zimbabwe Election Support Network. But the African Union has said that any irregularities were not enough to overturn the margin of victory. Meanwhile, the United States has refused to lift sanctions on Zimbabwe despite a call by regional leaders for the West to do so. At a meeting of the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) over the weekend, Malawi's President Joyce Banda said "Zimbabweans have suffered enough". But Ms Psaki said the US stood by its assessment that while the elections were relatively peaceful, they were not a credible expression of voters' opinions "due to serious flaws throughout the electoral process, as highlighted by the regional and domestic monitors".
Zimbabwe's opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai may face contempt of court charges for "disparaging remarks" he made about the judiciary.
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Sameh Shoukry called for a two-state solution, but said conditions for achieving it were deteriorating. His trip is seen as a sign of strengthened ties between two countries sharing deep concerns over regional unrest. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has said he welcomes Egypt's efforts. The last round of peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians came to an end amid acrimony in April 2014. The Palestinians accused Israel of reneging on a deal to free prisoners, while Israel said it would not continue negotiations after the Palestinians decided to bring the militant Islamist Hamas movement into a unity government. Mr Shoukry, the first Egyptian foreign minister to visit Israel in nine years, said the current state of affairs was "neither stable nor sustainable". He added that the vision of two states living side by side was "not far-fetched" and called for confidence-building measures that could lead to renewed peace talks. "It is no longer acceptable to claim that the status quo is the most that we can achieve of the hopes and aspirations of the Palestinian and Israeli peoples," he said, alongside Mr Netanyahu in Jerusalem. Mr Shoukry met the Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud Abbas, in the West Bank on 29 June. Co-operation between Israel and Egypt has intensified under Egyptian President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi. Egypt faces Islamist militants in the Sinai region south of Israel, and both countries are wary of Gaza's Hamas Islamist rulers. In May, Mr Sisi urged both sides to seize the opportunity to make a peace deal, offering the Arab peace initiative of 2002 as a potential way ahead. Mr Netanyahu said he would be willing to discuss the plan, but that changes would have to be made. He repeated his call for Palestinians to resume direct negotiations with Israel. Violence has escalated recently, and 35 Israelis have been killed in a wave of knife, gun and car-ramming attacks since October. More than 200 Palestinians - mostly attackers, Israel says - have also been killed in that period. Earlier this month, the so-called Middle East Quartet said ongoing violence, Israeli settlement-building and Palestinian splits were undermining peace hopes. And it warned of "perpetual occupation and conflict" between both sides.
Egypt's foreign minister has paid a rare visit to Israel, offering his country's help to revive peace talks with the Palestinians.
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Nottinghamshire Police said it would be increasing police activity after gathering intelligence on Notts County followers all season. The news comes after three people were charged following trouble at County's 5-0 defeat at Mansfield on Saturday. The club said it did not "condone the behaviour of a very small minority" of supporters at the Mansfield match. Live updates and more from Nottinghamshire Nottinghamshire Police believe a gang of "about 60 to 80" hooligans is targeting Notts County matches. Supt Mark Holland, who is head of football policing in Nottinghamshire, said he had been concerned about the group for some time. "We've been monitoring this all season and there is definitely an emerging group there," he said. "There's about 60 to 80 'supporters' who have been attending away games, causing problems and disorder. "We don't police more than 50% of the games in Nottinghamshire, but we've been attending all Notts County games in an intelligence-gathering capacity. "They're trying to get themselves established, but we've arrested quite a few of them, we've gathered quite a bit of intelligence and there'll be further action to come." Formed in 1862, Notts County is considered to be the oldest professional football team in the world and was one of 12 founding members of the Football League in 1888. Saturday's arrests at the League Two match at Mansfield were for possession of a firework/flare at a sporting event, being drunk at a sports ground and accessing the pitch. Three men were charged and have been bailed to appear in court next month. Mr Corbyn said the PM should have focused on issues like cyber crime, fair trade and the refugee crisis. And he claimed the "influence of Tory Party funders" could be seen in protections for the City of London. The PM told MPs leaving the European Union "could hurt working people for years to come". Responding to Mr Cameron's Commons statement on the reform deal that has triggered the UK's EU referendum on June 23, Mr Corbyn said Labour was "overwhelmingly for staying in". EU membership brought jobs and investment, he said. Turning to the reform package, The Labour leader backed a so-called "red card system" allowing national Parliaments to club together and veto EU law, saying this had previously been proposed by his party. But he said the majority of the PM's negotiations had not been about the future of Europe. Highlighting what he said were "serious, pressing issues" that Mr Cameron should have focused on, he said welfare reforms should have addressed low pay in the UK, the undercutting of wages and the "grotesque" exploitation of migrant workers. The prime minister said he disagreed with Mr Corbyn "on many things" but said they agreed that Britain should be part of Europe. His draft deal, he said, implemented "almost every single pledge" on Europe that had been in Labour's general election manifesto.
One of the Football League's founding clubs has an "emerging" hooligan firm, a police force has warned. [NEXT_CONCEPT] David Cameron's EU negotiations were a "theatrical sideshow" aimed at appeasing Conservative MPs, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has said.
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North Wales Fire and Rescue Service said the blaze on Victoria Pier in Colwyn Bay started due to hot metal work being carried out by contractors. About 10 firefighters used cherry pickers to reach the fire, which broke at about 16:30 BST on Friday. A crew remained on-site overnight as the tide restricted access and they could not be sure the fire was out. Part of the 116-year-old structure, which was already closed to the public for safety reasons, collapsed into the sea last month. It was further hit by Storm Doris three weeks later. Work to demolish the damaged parts of the pier, which has been closed since 2008, began earlier this month. The remainder of the seaward section is to be redeveloped into a shortened boardwalk with plans to restore its 1930s Art Deco pavilion also being looked at. Conwy council voted to demolish the structure in 2013 and a report at the time said restoring the pier would cost more than £15m. But demolition was refused by the Welsh Government in 2015. The latest Markit/CIPS service sector purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 54.9 from the previous month's figure of 53.3. A figure above 50 indicates growth in the sector. It was first time for four months that the growth rate has improved, although Markit said the pace remained "relatively subdued". Sterling rose to its highest point against the euro since mid-August at 70.78 pence after the numbers were released, and against the dollar it rose to $1.5446. The survey found that jobs growth hit a five-month high among services companies, which account for about three-quarters of activity in the UK's private sector. The services figure followed strong readings from comparable surveys of the manufacturing and construction sectors. Markit chief economist Chris Williamson said: "Such an improvement, together with the revival in hiring signalled by the three surveys ... may coax more policymakers into [voting to raise] interest rates before the end of the year." However, he added: "Dovish policymakers will note the ongoing lack of inflationary pressures in October, suggesting that there is no need to rush into raising rates." Most economists do not expect the Bank of England to raise rates until the second quarter of next year.
A fire at a disused Grade II-listed pier in Conwy county was accidental, the fire service has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Growth in the UK service sector accelerated last month, according to a closely watched survey.
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Mr Vazquez's decisive victory in the 2014 run-off presidential election over right-wing challenger Luis Lacalle Pou cemented left-wing rule for another five years. A cancer doctor by profession, Tabare Vazquez served as president in 2005-2010, being succeeded by his party colleague Jose Mujica. Uruguayan presidents do not serve consecutive terms. Mr Vazquez pledged to focus more attention on improving education standards and fighting crime, while maintaining the generous social welfare policies of Mr Mujica.
President: Tabare Vazquez
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Felling operations are taking place at Mabie Forest near Dumfries from December until February. The action will remove trees infected with Phytophthora ramorum as well as some unaffected by the disease. The main entrance to the forest will be shut on weekdays in December but should be reopened by Christmas. Visitors have been asked to follow diversion signs. Public information notices, details of works and trail closures will also be regularly updated and posted on site and online. Sallie Bailey, Forest Enterprise Scotland's district manager for Dumfries and the Borders, said: "Mabie is one of our most popular recreation sites in the region - with 7stanes mountain bike trails as well as walking trails. "Regrettably, felling is unavoidable because it is one of the crucial steps we can take to try and minimise the progress of this disease, which has badly affected larch, particularly in parts of south-west Scotland. "These works will change the look of the forest for a short time, but also present opportunities for future replanting." Similar operations planned for Heathhall Forest are likely to begin in the New Year and be completed by the beginning of March.
The public has been warned about restricted access to a south of Scotland forest as efforts to tackle a killer tree disease continue.
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Tim Smart replaces interim chair Mike Petter after a Care Quality Commission (CQC) report found the trust was "continuing to put patients at risk". Southern Health failed to adopt safe bathing guidelines for two-and-a-half years after Connor Sparrowhawk died following an epileptic seizure in 2013, the report found. Mr Smart said reviewing the capability of the trust's board was a priority. During an urgent question in the House of Commons on Tuesday Fareham MP Suella Fernandes said "serious changes in the leadership" were needed. Mr Petter's departure was followed by the resignation of Mark Aspinall, one of 13 public governors for the trust. In his resignation letter, Mr Aspinall said there was an "apparent lack of drive and determination" to improve the situation at the trust. Former hospital chief executive Mr Smart said: "Two of my immediate priorities are to make sure that the quality and safety of our services improve and to make sure the Board functions more effectively. "The Care Quality Commission has identified some serious issues which need to be resolved quickly and effectively. I assure everyone that as Chair I will always act in the best interests of the population we serve." They featured on a shortlist of three nominees including Hallé Orchestra music director Sir Mark Elder. In a ballot of university staff and former students, Mr Sissay received 7,131 votes while Sir Mark polled 5,483 and Lord Mandelson gained 5,269 votes. Mr Sissay said: "My primary aim is to inspire and be inspired." He added: "Reach for the top of the tree and you may get to the first branch but reach for the stars and you'll get to the top of the tree." The writer, who has authored plays and books of poetry, is also an associate artist at London's Southbank Centre. He will start the seven-year role on 1 August, replacing current chancellor, property developer Tom Bloxham MBE, the founder of Manchester-based company Urban Splash. "I am proud to be Chancellor of this fantastic University and extremely grateful to everyone who voted for me," he added. Mr Sissay recently campaigned successfully for a police investigation after complaints of historical physical and sexual abuse at a former children's home in Wigan. Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, who is president at the university, congratulated Mr Sissay on his role, adding it was a ceremonial office, which involved "significant ambassadorial responsibilities in helping to promote the university's achievements worldwide". "Each one of the nominees had excellent credentials and would have made a fine ambassador for the University." A university spokesman said there could be "other ways" that Sir Mark and former Labour cabinet minister Lord Mandelson could support the institution, which has nearly 38,000 students. Lord Mandelson, who was a key figure in the Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, recently said he wanted the post "because the city of Manchester is becoming the most exciting, edgy place to be around in England". An installation ceremony will be held at the university in October. Factfile: Lemn Sissay Source: Lemn Sissay blog and British Council Costica Voedes was arrested following the attack on the 17-year-old in Epsom, Surrey, at about 22:30 BST on Friday. Mr Voedes, 32, of High Street, Epsom, was remanded in custody and is due before magistrates on Monday. The girl was stabbed in the abdomen and her condition is serious but not life-threatening, Surrey Police said. Mr Voedes is accused of two counts of wounding with intent, two counts of rape, kidnap, false imprisonment, possession of an offensive weapon, affray and common assault. He is due to appear at South East Surrey Magistrates' Court on Monday. The victim is being treated at St George's Hospital in Tooting. A Pizza Hut staff member, who tried to help her, suffered injuries to his arm which are not believed to be serious.
A new chair has been appointed to the criticised Southern Health NHS Trust. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The writer Lemn Sissay has beaten former politician Lord Peter Mandelson in the election for the chancellorship of the University of Manchester. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been accused of a series of offences including rape and kidnap after a teenage girl was dragged out of a Pizza Hut and stabbed.
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Chris Sontag-Ratti's dog Everything, died on the 23 January 2014. To mark the second anniversary of her death, Chris decided to buy 100 tennis balls and post them to dog owners. "I hope that the people that get a ball from me will use it to spend quality time with their best friend," he wrote on Instagram. "This tennis ball is a memory of my best friend. Thank you for helping to keep her memory alive." The post clearly touched a nerve with pet owners around the world, as more than 8,000 people liked the post in 24 hours. It quickly became one of the most liked topics on Reddit, with users sharing their own stories of pets loved and lost. "Wow. I had to close the page really fast to avoid crying," wrote one user. "I lost my four-legged sister two years ago," wrote another. "She used to love to play fetch - but would never let go of the ball once she brought it back. I'm tearing up at work." So far Chris, who is in California, has been contacted by over 200 people and has sent out more than 70 tennis balls. He has had requests from all over the world including as far away as Australia. He says "My friend has donated packaging and labels to post all the tennis balls and I have more balls ordered. Now all I have to do is pay for sending them. I don't want to ask for help as it does not seem right, but I am so grateful for all the support I've received." It's not the first time that dogs and their love of tennis balls have been such a hit on social media. In 2013, another Reddit user posted a picture of a bucket of tennis balls which was left on a dog beach in Australia in memory of a Staffordshire bull terrier which had passed away. A well-known dog beach in San Diego, California also has a dog ball bucket in memory of a military working dog called Raika. Reddit even has its own subreddit dedicated to pets who have recently died. Keen to remember their friends in happier times, many owners have taken to posting bucket lists for their terminally ill pets. A Facebook page set up by Canadian Riina Cooke, to catalogue the exploits of her boxer Romeo, has more than 12,000 likes. It still draws comments from people around the world, almost two years after he passed away. Facebook and other social media sites offer bereaved relatives the opportunity to memorialise a user's account. There are also specialist websites where loved ones can pay tribute to family members. Chris believes the lack of options for pet owners is one of the reasons why his tribute has gone viral. "Many of the emails I have received are from people not necessarily wanting tennis balls, but just wanting to share stories about their beloved pets," he said. "Everything was my everything. Losing her left a big hole in my heart. This was a cathartic way to deal with her loss. The response I've received is testament to how the death of a pet is like losing a family member." "I'm touched by the response and helping others is a way of breathing life into her memory." By Hannah Henderson with additional reporting by Rozina Sini Work on Rhigos Mountain Road which links the Rhondda and Cynon valleys began in April and is due to be finished by Sunday. It forms part of a £23m investment by the local council to tackle damage caused by severe winters. Rhondda Cynon Taf council leader Andrew Morgan said the focus had been to complete work before next winter. About 6,000 tonnes of new surface has been laid on a 5.6 mile (9km) section.
One man's tribute to his beloved Rottweiler has gone viral after he offered to post tennis balls to dog owners on the anniversary of her death. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Road closures are set to be lifted as £1.25m repairs on a major route in Rhondda Cynon Taff near completion.
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Newport Gwent Dragons chairman Martyn Hazell says professional rugby at the ground could end if the Welsh Rugby Union [WRU] takeover is not completed. To take control of the Dragons and Rodney Parade, the WRU needs 75% of the vote at a Newport RFC shareholder meeting. "[Newport] has a proud history dating back over 100 years," said Raiwalui. "It is one of the founder clubs of Welsh rugby. The thought of not having rugby at Rodney Parade would be a travesty for me." Dragons play at the ground, as do Newport RFC and Newport County, who are battling against relegation from the Football League. Raiwalui played for Newport between 1999 and 2003, leaving before Dragons were formed amid Welsh rugby's move to regional teams. Newport RFC's future has been in the spotlight in recent weeks with much resting on the shareholders meeting, which is expected to take place in early May. An independent group of supporters, Friends of Newport Rugby, say questions over the future of both the ground and the club remain unanswered. "I enjoyed my time there, it is a really important part of Welsh rugby," Raiwalui told BBC Wales Sport. "The development of a lot of young players come through that area [Newport and Gwent] and I think they should do as much as possible to save the club." New Zealand-born ex-Fiji lock Raiwalui returns to Wales on Sunday as the Stade Francais side he manages face Ospreys in a European Challenge Cup quarter-final at Cardiff's Principality Stadium.
Former Newport RFC captain Simon Raiwalui says having no rugby at Rodney Parade would be a "travesty".
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The five-year deal with Yokohama Rubber Company eclipses the £18m-per-year-deal the club signed with Samsung in 2006. Manchester United's seven-year deal with US car brand Chevrolet remains the biggest, worth around £50m per year. Chelsea are top of the Premier League and are in the last 16 of the Champions League. The West London club are now one of the world's most recognised sporting brands with an estimated 500m fans and were the most watched English side worldwide last season with 31,000 broadcast hours. "Chelsea and Yokohama are a perfect fit. Both are global organisations with a focus on performance and innovation, as well as having huge ambition and an unwavering culture of success," Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck said on the club's website. The Yokohama Rubber Company Ltd is a Tokyo Stock Exchange listed public company and deals in industrial, construction, marine and aerospace products, as well as golf equipment. Its global business employs more than 20,000 people in over 120 countries, working across manufacturing, sales and servicing.
Chelsea have signed English football's second biggest shirt sponsorship deal - worth a reported £40m per year - with a Japanese tyre manufacturer.
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The town hall commissioned a street art mural by the country's top graffiti artist, C215, showing a sulking boy slumped against a wall. But there was a slight hitch - the town's cleaning department were not told not to remove it. C215, whose real name is Christian Guemy, seemed quite relaxed about it. The artist told AFP news agency what surprised him was that it was cleaned up by the same city that commissioned him. The town hall had apologised, he said. Meanwhile officials told French media that the artist would return to Reims at the start of March to carry out more work. The culture and events department would be giving advance notice to the anti-graffiti squad this time, they added. The feasibility report, commissioned by the charity Crisis, looked at piloting the Housing First support system aimed at reducing homelessness. Finding people a home "improves well-being" and is more cost-effective than hostel placements, it said. LCR Mayor Steve Rotheram said it could "change how we tackle homelessness". The study, funded by the UK government and the charity Housing First, said the "current system is failing some of the most vulnerable homeless people, who often struggle with the rules and conditions, stress, and lack of security in hostels". It said they needed "higher levels of support as a result of poor mental health, substance misuse, physical or learning disabilities or a history of offending". Adopting the Housing First scheme could save LCR between £1.18m and £4.02m annually by 2023/24, the report claims. It estimated LCR - which includes Liverpool, Knowsley, Sefton, St Helens, Wirral and the Cheshire borough of Halton - would have to spend about £12,600 per user annually if implemented. The study by the charity Crisis and others found that in April this year more than 500 people in the Liverpool city region had been using homeless services for a year. Of these, 15-20 were considered long-term rough sleepers in Liverpool itself, the council said. Jon Sparkes, chief executive of Crisis, said: "For the most vulnerable rough sleepers, the best approach is to support people into a stable home of their own as soon as possible and shape personalised support around them." Along with LCR mayor Steve Rotheram, he called on the UK government to consider the "radical new approach", which has been used in Scotland, Denmark, Finland, France, Canada and the US. Mr Rotheram said: "I recognise the enormously valuable work being done by agencies... but as this report makes clear, there are limitations to the current system, which mean that all too often the most vulnerable rough sleepers are falling through the cracks." Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said the study provided "valuable evidence for consideration by our new Homelessness Reduction Task Force".
Citizens of Reims in northern France have lost a brand new artwork commissioned for the town, after the anti-graffiti squad scrubbed it off. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Providing long-term rough-sleepers with a place of their own could save the Liverpool City Region (LCR) up to £4m a year, a study has found.
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UK Sport has also confirmed that the aim is to maintain second place in the medal table. In Beijing four years ago, GB finished with 102 medals, including 42 golds from 11 sports, and were second behind China who won 89 golds. Winning medals in front of an excited home crowd will give us a great platform to help shift perceptions of Paralympic sport The London Games begin on 29 August and will run until 9 September. Based on data from all 18 funded Paralympic sports (the five-a-side and seven-a-side football teams are financed by the Football Association), a collective performance target range of 95 to 145 medals has been set with 16 of those sports targeting medals. GB's Paralympic campaign has been backed by more than £49m of funding from UK Sport. The British Olympic team had been set a minimum target of 48 medals for London 2012, but surpassed that figure, finishing with 65 medals which included 29 golds. "British Paralympic sport is better-resourced and in a stronger position than ever before," said UK Sport chair Baroness Sue Campbell. "We are able to confirm that our goal of holding second place in the Paralympic medal table at our home Games remains on track, in line with our intentions set out back in 2006 when extra funding for Olympic and Paralympic sport was secured. "The fantastic news we received last week from the Prime Minister that funding for elite sport is to be maintained into the Rio cycle is a wonderful endorsement for the achievements of our Olympic and Paralympic athletes to date. "And it is great to be able to say with confidence, ahead of the Paralympic Games, that the era post-2012 will truly mark a new beginning for Olympic and Paralympic sport in the UK. "I'd like to wish our Paralympians, their coaches and support staff every success in London and I hope they gain the recognition they deserve for their commitment and dedication to British sport." British Paralympic Association chief executive Tim Hollingsworth said: "ParalympicsGB is going into these Games better prepared through support from the National Lottery than ever before and we are all ready to give everything to achieve our target of second in the medal table. "Equally important is the fantastic news that our athletes will be competing in full venues. Winning medals in front of an excited home crowd will give us a great platform to help shift perceptions of Paralympic sport and ensure that our athletes get the recognition they deserve." 31 March 2017 Last updated at 17:45 BST The underground shelter was built at RAF Lindholme, near Doncaster, in the late 1930s. It is due to be auctioned later this year by estate agents Barnsdales. Paddy Jackson, 25, and Stuart Olding, 24, have been accused of raping the same woman in Belfast in June 2016. Both men deny the charges. Stuart Olding is charged with two counts of rape. Paddy Jackson is charged with one count of rape and one count of sexual assault. Neither player was in court during the short hearing at Belfast Magistrates' Court this morning. The Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) and Ulster Rugby have said Paddy Jackson and Stuart Olding will not play again until the court process concludes. Both men deny the charges against them. Two other men have also been charged in connection with the same case. Blane McIlroy 25, of Royal Lodge Road, Belfast is charged with one count of exposure, and Rory Harrison 25, of Manse Road, Belfast is charged with perverting the course of justice and withholding information. Both deny the charges against them. Neither was present at the seven-minute hearing The case will return to court on 6 September.
Britain's Paralympic team have been set a minimum medal target by UK Sport of 103 from at least 12 sports at the London Games. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A former RAF bomb shelter turned Cold War nuclear bunker is due to be sold at auction with a guide price of £25,000 to £35,000. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Court proceedings involving rape charges against two Ulster and Ireland rugby players have begun.
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Despite the wealth and palaces, however, the life of a senior royal is not always easy and can - according to royal watchers - be a lonely one. There are few people who are able to understand what it means to occupy such a high-profile position. For a future heir like Prince George, the new princess may be the only one who truly can. The Queen had a famously close relationship with her younger sister, Margaret. The two had little option but to get on as young girls as they had little contact with the outside world. Both were home-schooled and a guide troop was even set up in Buckingham Palace to allow them some contact with their peers, but within the confines of the palace. The sisterly bond continued throughout their lives. Despite being very different in character they were a tight unit, reportedly telephoning each other every day. Prince Charles and Princess Anne are 21 months apart - the same as Prince George and his new sister. A private letter written by the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth, when Anne was just three weeks old described Charles as being "fascinated by her" and said he treated her "with great care". However, despite the fact that as adults they have chosen country homes less than 10 miles apart, they have not been seen as particularly close, although they do get on well. Royal siblings have had tricky relationships over the years. One of the most dramatic falling outs came in 1478, when Edward IV reportedly had his younger brother George, Duke of Clarence - suspected of treason - drowned in a butt of wine. Such sibling rivalry is in direct contrast to Prince George's father and uncle who continue to enjoy a very close relationship. As well as having to grow up in public, William and Harry had to cope with the death of their mother when they were just 15 and 12, and the brothers have spoken about how they are the other's best friends. Penny Junor, who has profiled both the princes, says being a royal child is difficult. "They will always be an object of curiosity", she says, adding that having a close sibling was "certainly invaluable for William and Harry when they were growing up and still is today and will be for George and his little chum". Princess Diana tried to make William and Harry's upbringing as normal as possible, and this is clearly a priority for the Cambridges. The downside for a public keen to see George and his sibling is that much of their growing up will be done behind closed doors. Prince George has been an object of global fascination since his birth in July 2013. However, the media have had few opportunities to film him: the first view on the steps of the Lindo wing, his christening and when he accompanied his parents on their tour of Australia and New Zealand in April last year. Photographs have been released to mark key moments including his first birthday, and each time his clothes, appearance and demeanour have been scrutinised, commented upon and copied. Now there are two royal youngsters there will be double the interest. But they can at least share the intense spotlight which will be trained upon them throughout their lives. The Croatia side ended Dinamo Zagreb's run of 11 league titles last season. TNS overcame Europa FC in the first round - where Rijeka had a bye - after a thrilling extra-time win against the Gibraltar champions. "Rijeka are a good team to watch... they've just beaten Lokomotiv Moscow 1-0 in a friendly," Ruscoe said. "Friendly or not, if you're beating that standard of team and looking comfortable then you're obviously a good level. "They've got good players, lots of international players so we'll be up against it, but we'll have a game plan again and give it our best. "Like against the Gibraltar side, if we play at our maximum anything can happen." He will next play Northern Ireland's Daryl Gurney, who beat him last month. Anderson's compatriot Peter Wright also progressed to the second round, defeating Keegan Brown 3-0. Huntly's John Henderson plays Norwich's Darren Webster in Friday afternoon's session and Scot Robert Thornton takes on Alan Norris on Monday night. Anderson won his first world title in January in a dramatic final against Phil Taylor and he will compete with 71 other players for the £1.5m in prize money.
The new royal baby has been born into a life of great privilege. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The New Saints boss Scott Ruscoe expects a big step up in class against Rijeka in Tuesday's Champions League second qualifying round, first-leg tie. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Gary Anderson began the defence of his PDC World Championship title with a 3-0 win over Englishman Andy Boulton at London's Alexandra Palace on Thursday.
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The game was twice delayed in the first 10 minutes when Charlton fans threw plastic pigs onto the pitch in protest against the club's ownership. After Nathan Byrne hit the bar for Charlton, George Thomas fired the Sky Blues ahead from close range. But Patrick Bauer's headed equaliser in the second half sealed City's fate. Coventry were in the Premier League as recently as 2001, but they now face the prospect of playing fourth-tier football for the first time since 1959. The Sky Blues' descent towards relegation saw them fail to win in their opening 10 games, with a difficult season on the pitch matched by problems off it, with fans holding a series of protests against the club's owners, the hedge fund Sisu. Their form has improved in recent weeks under Mark Robins, culminating in their victory over Oxford in the EFL Trophy final, and they started the brighter of the two teams. Both sides were withdrawn from the field after Addicks fans threw pigs onto the pitch for the second time, with Coventry taking the lead through Thomas' sharp finish. Jodi Jones had a shot saved just before half-time, while Thomas went close again after the break, but City could not maintain their advantage. Bauer nodded in from two yards out after Coventry failed to clear a corner, and the hosts could not find a late winner to stave off the drop. Charlton meanwhile climb to 15th, six points clear of relegation with three games to play. Match ends, Coventry City 1, Charlton Athletic 1. Second Half ends, Coventry City 1, Charlton Athletic 1. Attempt missed. Josh Magennis (Charlton Athletic) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Corner, Coventry City. Conceded by Chris Solly. Foul by Gael Bigirimana (Coventry City). Jake Forster-Caskey (Charlton Athletic) wins a free kick on the right wing. Attempt missed. George Thomas (Coventry City) right footed shot from very close range is just a bit too high from a direct free kick. Kwame Thomas (Coventry City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Andrew Crofts (Charlton Athletic). Attempt saved. Jake Forster-Caskey (Charlton Athletic) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Ben Stevenson (Coventry City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Ben Stevenson (Coventry City). Fredrik Ulvestad (Charlton Athletic) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Charlton Athletic. Joe Aribo replaces Ricky Holmes. Foul by Kevin Foley (Coventry City). Josh Magennis (Charlton Athletic) wins a free kick on the left wing. Attempt missed. Nathan Byrne (Charlton Athletic) right footed shot from the right side of the box is close, but misses to the right. Substitution, Coventry City. Kyel Reid replaces Jodi Jones. Attempt saved. Josh Magennis (Charlton Athletic) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Substitution, Coventry City. Kevin Foley replaces Jordan Willis. Kwame Thomas (Coventry City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Patrick Bauer (Charlton Athletic). Jodi Jones (Coventry City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Jodi Jones (Coventry City). Jake Forster-Caskey (Charlton Athletic) wins a free kick on the left wing. Corner, Charlton Athletic. Conceded by Farrend Rawson. Attempt saved. George Thomas (Coventry City) left footed shot from the left side of the six yard box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Foul by Kwame Thomas (Coventry City). Jason Pearce (Charlton Athletic) wins a free kick on the right wing. Attempt missed. George Thomas (Coventry City) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Attempt saved. Jodi Jones (Coventry City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Attempt missed. Ben Stevenson (Coventry City) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left. Corner, Coventry City. Conceded by Chris Solly. Foul by Josh Magennis (Charlton Athletic). Jordan Turnbull (Coventry City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Andrew Crofts (Charlton Athletic) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Andrew Crofts (Charlton Athletic). Ruben Lameiras (Coventry City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Charlton Athletic. Jake Forster-Caskey replaces Ezri Konsa Ngoyo. Goal! Coventry City 1, Charlton Athletic 1. Patrick Bauer (Charlton Athletic) header from very close range to the top left corner. Assisted by Josh Magennis following a corner.
Coventry City were relegated to the fourth tier of English football for the first time in 58 years after drawing with fellow strugglers Charlton.
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HIE has invested £25m in the project which will provide a new home for Inverness College UHI, an enterprise and research centre, a life science building, sports facilities and a hotel. The campus is being created on 215 acres (87ha) on the east side of the city. Infrastructure work is almost complete on 89 acres (36ha), HIE has said. Another part of the site will be turned into 30 acres (12ha) of parkland. Construction of the new £50m Inverness College UHI building is already well under way. It is due to be completed by next summer and available for the 2015-16 academic year. Once open, the new college will be able to accommodate more than 6,500 full-time and part-time students. Some areas of landscaping have already been finished on the campus, while an artist's impression gives an insight into how the reception zone of the new college will look. HIE has sought innovative designs for outdoor seating and bus shelters. But more traditional features, such as hand-built drystone walls, have also been added. An artificial lochan has also been constructed with a viewing platform giving views over it and parts of Inverness, including the Raigmore area. An outdoor gallery has been constructed on an island on the lochan. Dubbed the Island Gallery, it will be offered as an outdoor venue for cultural events. Pedestrians and cyclists will be able to access the campus using a crossing called the Golden Bridge. Lifting the span of the bridge into place required the closure of the A9 in April last year. The operation was to be done in a single night, but work was halted when a wheel section of one of the jacks buckled. The bridge was successfully installed the following night. After her Bercy arena concert on Wednesday, she tweeted she was heading to the Place de la Republique, which has become a shrine to those who died. Madonna, who is in the city for her Rebel Heart tour, was filmed singing along with her 10-year-old son David. She began by singing Ghosttown and then moved on to John Lennon's Imagine and her classic track Like A Prayer. Madonna's surprise appearance in the city also saw her accompanied by guitarist Monte Pittman, who is currently on tour with the artist. "She wanted to pay tribute, she loves this city," Pittman told AFP. "It is magical. I will never forget this." One hundred and thirty people were killed in Paris when gunmen and suicide bombers carried out a series of attacks in the French capital. Madonna told Wednesday night's onlookers: "Everybody knows why we're here… we just want to sing a few songs about peace, just to spread love and joy, and to pay our honour and respect to the people who died almost four weeks ago. "And to spread light… we all need it." Pete Hall, a British tourist, told AFP: "It was inspiring, it was raw, it was real. "She was paying her respects to Paris." Reaction on Twitter included praise from fan MadonnaEffect, who said: "Madonna yet again reminding me why she is my absolute IDOL. "So proud of her, she is the gift that just keeps on giving." At her concert earlier on Wednesday evening, Madonna had wrapped herself in the French flag and sang the country's national anthem, La Marseillaise. She told the audience: "We will not bend down to fear. I think of what happened almost four weeks ago now. The heart of Paris and the heart of France beats in the heart of each city. "I came here when I was 20 and it was here, in Paris, that I decided to make music. Thank you Paris for planting that seed in my heart."
On land just off the A9 on the edge of Inverness a new campus is being developed by Highlands and Islands Enterprise. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Madonna has given an impromptu performance in Paris in tribute to the victims of the 13 November attacks.
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Jack Taylor drove a tipper truck in the crash that killed Steven Davidson-Hackett in Exeter on 23 June, 2012. He was given a £1,500 fine and a one-year driving ban by Exeter Crown Court for taking a vehicle without consent and drink-driving. Ray Davidson-Hackett described the sentence as "a total disgrace, a total let-down". He said: "My son's life is worth 1,500 quid. The courts have let us down, the CPS have let us down, and the legal system has let us down." In 2013 Taylor, from Plymouth-based 42 Commando, pleaded guilty to causing the death of 20-year-old Mr Davidson-Hackett, but the Supreme Court later ruled that Taylor's drink-driving did not cause the accident and this charge and a charge of aggravated vehicle taking were not applicable. The 28-year-old pleaded guilty to taking a vehicle without consent and drink-driving. Judge Graham Cottle said Steven Davidson-Hackett's family and friends would understandably "feel let down by the criminal justice system" and he had "the greatest sympathy" for them. Taylor had an alcohol level of 110 milligrams in 100 millilitres of blood - more than the legal limit of 80 milligrams - when his truck collided with the moped rider on his drive home from work. Taylor had been driving at less than the 30mph speed limit when he collided with Mr Davidson-Hackett's 100cc scooter on a blind bend in the single track road, the court heard. Mr Davidson-Hackett suffered fatal injuries as he went under the wheels of the truck and was dragged along the road and died in hospital later.
The father of a moped rider killed in a crash with a drink-driver says he feels betrayed by the justice system.
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Research from the Institute for Policy Studies found that in 2014, bonuses paid to Wall Street employees had been double the annual pay earned by all Americans who worked full-time at the federal minimum wage. So, 167,800 Wall Street employees were paid $28.5bn (£18.2bn) in bonuses, while 1,007,000 full-time minimum wage earners made about $14bn. One particularly eye-catching blog on the subject carried the headline: "If You Own a Pitchfork, You Will Grab It When You See This Chart". I wondered if this statistic was also true in the UK. The best proxy we have for the Wall Street bonus pool is the ONS figure for bonuses paid in the finance and insurance sector, the most recent figure for which was £14.4bn in the financial year 2013-14. The Low Pay Commission says that excluding apprenticeships there were 1.3 million jobs in 2014 that paid the National Minimum Wage (NMW) of which 40% were full-time, so that's about 520,000 jobs. Assuming everyone earned the highest level of minimum wage, the average level of the NMW for 2013-14 was £6.25. If we assume that they worked 37.5 hours a week (that's the average number of full-time hours given in the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings for 2014) and that they work 48 weeks a year, their total earnings come to £5.9bn, which is less than half the amount paid in bonuses by the finance and insurance sector - it's about 40%. Before you go and buy a pitchfork, remember that there are differences between this figure and the US one. For example, the bonuses in the UK finance and insurance sector were shared between more than a million employees - considerably more than on Wall Street. There were people paid very high bonuses but also people paid much more modest ones. The average overall was £13,300, but I would expect that to mask quite a range. But the other question is, what is this an indicator for and what would make it rise or fall? So, for example, imagine that 100,000 people earning minimum wage suddenly received a pay rise of £1 an hour. They would no longer be earning minimum wage, so the total amount paid to workers on the minimum wage would fall considerably and as a result the amount paid out in bonuses would be a higher multiple of it. But it would be hard to argue that their pay rise had increased inequality. Nonetheless, if you were outraged by the figure from the US then you will be just as outraged that the same appears to be true in the UK. The 23-year-old suffered a double leg break against Ipswich Town in May last season and has had complications in his recovery, including an infection. Boss Nigel Pearson has said he will not take any risks with Thorne, who has been plagued by injury while at Derby. Thorne played 36 games for Derby in 2015-16, having missed most of the previous campaign with a knee injury. The £41.7m sale of Jacksons CI to investment company Ravenscroft was completed on Friday after approval from the competition and finance regulators. The deal includes the Jacksons and Motor Mall car showrooms in Jersey and Guernsey, Trinity Tyres in Jersey and St Martin's Tyres in Guernsey. All 250 staff have been told their jobs are safe, said CEO Paul Collier. The former managing director has taken on the role of chief executive officer following the sale. He said they had "liaised closely with the 23 vehicle marques we represent to assure them that it is business as usual". The previous owner, Tom Scott, has become a director of the firm. The sale was subject to approval from the Jersey Competition Regulatory Authority and the Jersey Financial Services Commission.
A statistic in March provoked outrage in the US media about inequality. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Derby County midfielder George Thorne is expected to be out until mid-November, BBC Radio Derby reports. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jobs are safe at one of the largest car dealerships in the Channel Islands, according to the new owners.