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It follows the launch of 24-hour services on the Central, Victoria, Jubilee and Northern lines. The RMT union has called for the launch to be delayed due to "on-going safety concerns" connected to wet leaves damaging train wheels. Transport for London (TfL) has insisted "there are no safety concerns" and the launch will go ahead as planned. Commuters have faced disruption on the Piccadilly Line since last month when half its trains were taken out of service after the wheels were damaged. Mick Cash, RMT General Secretary, said: "The fleet consists of 43-year-old trains that have recently had their wheels replaced, leading to serious problems. "It is utter madness that while the service on the Piccadilly Line is at breaking point the company plan to run trains right through from 0500 [GMT] Friday morning until 0030 [GMT] Sunday." A spokesperson for TfL said: "There aren't any safety issues. If there were we wouldn't be launching". TfL added that despite having only 80% of operational trains running during its daytime Piccadilly service, it did have the necessary 25 trains needed to run the reduced night schedule. The latest Night Tube service will run every 10 minutes between Cockfosters and Heathrow Terminal 5, barring Terminal 4, on Fridays and Saturdays.
The Piccadilly Line will become the latest route to begin a Night Tube service later.
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He died of pneumonia at hospital earlier in July aged 78 years old. Despite acting for more than 50 years, he could not afford to pay his medical bills and a social media campaign by fans was organised to raise the money. Hundreds of film colleagues gathered at a stadium in the capital, Nairobi, for the funeral, also paid for by fans. BBC Africa Live: News updates Earlier they viewed his body at the national theatre and he has now been buried in a public cemetery. The BBC's Abninoor Maalim in Nairobi says Mr Wanjau was regarded as Kenya's father of family comedy. His TV series Vitimbi, popular in the 1980s and 1990s across East Africa, would take on social issues such as wife beating and drunkenness. Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta said the comedian "taught without sounding preachy, informed without boring anyone, and entertained without becoming trivial". "Family television will not be the same without the promise of 'Mzee Ojwang' regaling the nation with his antics," he added. Although Mr Wanjau had been out of the limelight for some time, his portrayal of "Mzee Ojwang" was well remembered by Kenyans, our correspondent says. The character was an uneducated authoritarian type, who was constantly suspicious of his family and employees. Mr Wanjau's contract with the state broadcaster, KBC, was terminated in July 2014 after 40 year, in unclear circumstances, and angry fans allege the station mistreated him. Kenyan actress Lucy Wangoi, who acted alongside him since they were both in their twenties, is urging politicians to put in regulations to protect actors. "The only way the government can repay Mzee Ojwang as he rests is to establish policies that govern the film industry and invest in improving the lives of the artists," she told the BBC.
Kenyans have held a funeral for comic star Benson Wanjau, known to many by the name of his popular TV character "Mzee Ojwang".
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The gaming giant said that existing games built for other Nintendo platforms like the Wii U and 3DS will not be transferred. While the emphasis will be on making new games for mobile handsets, all of Nintendo's intellectual property will be "eligible for development". This includes popular game characters such as Super Mario, Zelda and Pokemon. The two firms also announced plans to launch an online membership service in the autumn of 2015 which will give members access to their accounts across multiple platforms, including smartphones and PCs. "Nintendo's decision to partner with DeNA is a recognition of the importance of the games app audience to the future of its business," said Piers Harding-Rolls, head of games research at analysts IHS. "The Nintendo-DeNA alliance is a good fit and offers up a number of important synergies for two companies that are no longer leaders in their respective segments." Last year, gaming apps were worth $26bn (£18bn) in consumer spend but handheld console games accounted for just $3.3bn, according to IHS figures. "The main challenge will be knitting together the cultures of both companies and aligning the speed of development and iteration that is needed in the mobile space with Nintendo's more patient and systematic approach to games content production," added Mr Harding-Rolls. "How the new games are monetised may also provide a challenge considering the general differences in models used in retail for Nintendo and through in-app purchases for DeNA."
Nintendo is collaborating with Japanese developer DeNA to create new games for smartphones, it has been announced.
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The red kite was discovered injured by a walker on farmland around Nidd, near Harrogate, on Saturday. North Yorkshire Police said it had been shot multiple times while it was flying and had to be put down by a vet because "its wing was so severely damaged". It is the second rare bird to have been shot in the county within the last month. An adult female red kite was found injured at Low Marishes, near Malton, on 25 March and was treated at a rescue centre. Red kites are protected under schedule 1 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and anyone found killing one can face up to six months in jail. Officers said the rare bird had survived the shooting but was unable to fly. It was found by the walker two days after it had been shot in the chest and underside of its wing. PC Gareth Jones said: "Red kites are majestic birds that mainly feed on carrion and pose no threat to game birds, farmed animals or pets. It has taken many years to re-introduce red kites after their extinction from the UK by persecution. "People in Harrogate have become used to seeing red kites soaring above the town and will be shocked by this meaningless and cruel act. "I would ask members of the public who were in the areas of Nidd, Brearton and Scotton on Thursday or Friday last week to contact North Yorkshire Police if they have any information that could assist the investigation." There are about 1,000 red kites in England. A spokesman said the MP, a republican, would "adhere to any procedures asked of him" but he had not been informed of any "specific ceremonial requirements". He follows in the footsteps of party leader and fellow republican Jeremy Corbyn, who was sworn in last year. Mr Corbyn said at the time he and the Queen "shook hands like adults". The Privy Council, a historic group of advisers to the monarch, currently has about 600 members, including former prime ministers and cabinet ministers as well as leaders of the opposition among others. Its regular meetings are usually only attended by Cabinet or very senior ministers. A traditional part of the swearing-in ceremony at Buckingham Palace involves kneeling and kissing the hand of the Queen. MPs who are privy counsellors are referred to as right honourable members in the House of Commons and can receive top secret security briefings. Conservative former cabinet minister Lord Tebbit has criticised Mr McDonnell's appointment, given comments he has previously made about the IRA and former Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher - for which Mr McDonnell apologised last year. Confirming the appointment - alongside those of Conservative MPs Sir Oliver Heald QC, a justice minister, and House Office minister Brandon Lewis - a Downing Street spokesman said: "The Queen has been pleased to approve that John McDonnell MP be sworn of Her Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council."
A protected bird of prey found shot in a field was killed in a "shocking act of cruelty", police have said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Shadow chancellor John McDonnell is to join the Privy Council but is not expected to kneel before the Queen, his spokesman has said.
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The 25-member-squad raised 2 million rupees ($32,112; £21,589) to travel to Kuwait for this week's International Ice Hockey Federation Challenge Cup. The fund raising campaign involved social media and a website. India's cricket stars can earn millions of dollars, but when it comes to other sports, players can struggle to raise enough funds to compete. The country's ice hockey players have taken part in six international competitions since 2009, but each time have struggled for funds. This time their travel, accommodation, and food in Kuwait will paid for by the crowd-funding. Akshay Kumar, director of Ice Hockey Association of India, told the BBC that the team raised the money in 10 days, and left for the week-long tournament late on Thursday. The association used a Twitter hashtag ##SupportIceHockey and set up a website to gather funds. He said three business groups had chipped in with 1.6 million rupees, while the remaining amount was contributed by the public. "People donated anything between 50 rupees and 65,000 rupees. The response was very good, and we are very thankful," he said. Although ice hockey is relatively unknown in the largely tropical sub-continent, the sport was introduced by the British in the hill town of Simla in northern India nearly a century ago. There are some 2,500 registered ice hockey players in India today, up from 300 in 2002, when the sport association was first set up.
Crowd-funders have helped pay for India's ice hockey players to take part in an international tournament.
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The bridge in Shoreham will allow pedestrians, cyclists and mobility scooter users to reach the town centre from Shoreham Beach. It replaces the old structure after its foundations had "taken a pounding" over the years and it could not be economically repaired. The bridge will open to the public in September. A shortlist of six names, from a list of more than 60 suggestions put forward by the public, was drawn up by a judging panel, made up of representatives from Shoreham-By-Sea organisations. Three hundred and thirty-eight votes were cast in total, with the Adur Ferry Bridge receiving more than a third of them.
A new £10m swing bridge in a West Sussex town is to be named the Adur Ferry Bridge following a public vote.
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The visitors went in front when Posh's Ricardo Santos miscued a Jordan Clarke cross past his own goalkeeper. Tom Hopper secured the points for the Iron with a close-range finish. Leonardo Da Silva Lopes and Aaron Williams saw efforts saved for the hosts as the Iron climb to eighth and just two points outside the top six.
Scunthorpe kept their League One play-off hopes alive as they made it four straight wins with a comfortable victory at mid-table Peterborough.
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Pte Gavin Williams, 22, from Hengoed, Caerphilly county, suffered heart failure at Lucknow Barracks in Tidworth, Wiltshire, on 3 July 2006. An inquest into his death heard he was made to do intense exercise as punishment for disobedience. One civil servant said she "couldn't believe what I was witnessing." The Salisbury hearing was told Pte Williams was subjected to the beasting by three non-commissioned officers before he complained of stomach pains. He collapsed and later died. Sgt Russell Price, of 2 Rifles, Sgt Paul Blake, and Cpl John Edwards, both from the 2nd Battalion The Royal Welsh, who carried out the punishment were cleared of manslaughter at Winchester Crown Court in 2008. It has been alleged during the hearing that Pte Williams was being punished for his involvement in an incident where guests attending a summer ball at the officers's mess were sprayed with a fire extinguisher. It was said Lt Col Mark Davis - who was a Captain at the time - directed him report to the Regimental Police staff at the guard room and then be brought to his office "hot and sweaty". He has denied ordering a beasting. L/Cpl Christopher Elshaw, who was on duty in the guard room that day, told the hearing he saw Pte Williams being shouted at before being drilled. When he saw him again later he said he looked like he was injured, adding: "He was stooping with his arm around his tummy, he looked uncomfortable." "He had a red face as if he had been marching and he was breathing heavily. He looked like he had been drilled and he was hot and sweaty." Civil servant Arthur Biershenk said he had not seen that type of drilling before in Lucknow Barracks "or anywhere else". His colleague Dawn Harrison, who watched from an open window, said: "It struck me that it was an incredibly hot day to do something like that. "To myself and my colleagues being civilians and not being in the Army it seemed preposterous to us the way the Army does their disciplinary action." "I couldn't believe what I was witnessing," she added. The inquest continues. Researchers believe that since 2010 an average of nearly 35,000 elephants have been killed in Africa every year. Elephants are being killed by poachers who want their tusks. They contain a material called ivory which is used to make ornaments in parts of Asia. The researchers warn that if this continues to happen, the animals could be wiped out in 100 years. The report is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Selling ivory between countries was made illegal in 1989. The illegal trade in elephant tusks has soared in recent years, and a kilogram of ivory is now worth thousands of dollars. Pictures: The illegal trade in elephant ivory Much of the demand for ivory is coming from Asia, where it is used to make specially designed ornaments and expensive gifts. China's government says ivory carving is an ancient art it wants to keep alive. George Wittemyer, from Colorado State University and who worked on the report, said: "We are shredding the fabric of elephant society and exterminating populations across the continent." Conservationists say urgent action is now needed to protect the elephant in Africa.
Several people witnessed a young soldier being "beasted" on the day he died from heatstroke on the hottest day of the year, an inquest has heard. [NEXT_CONCEPT] More elephants in Africa are being killed each year than are being born, according to a study.
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16 January 2017 Last updated at 11:04 GMT Businessman Donald Trump will replace him as the next President. Obama has been in charge for the last eight years, and while many Americans think he did a great job, lots are disappointed in what he's achieved. So we decided to take a look back at his time in the White House...
Barack Obama will officially step down as President of the United States this week.
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Of 77,000 tonnes of municipal waste and 67,000 tonnes of household waste collected yearly, the amount sent to landfill has gone down from 66% to 3%. Non-recyclable material has been sent to an energy-from-waste facility on Teesside, South Tyneside Council said. Area management lead member Tracey Dixon said it was "a significant achievement". "We are delighted that the amount of waste sent to landfill has been reduced so dramatically and that we are seeing more and more recyclables collected from the doorstep across South Tyneside," she said. In 2010, South Tyneside, Gateshead and Sunderland councils were awarded government funding of £73.5m to develop the waste treatment plant on Teesside. At the time it was anticipated the plant would save more than £300m over 25 years compared with the cost of sending waste to landfill sites. The waste treated on Teesside would be converted into enough energy to power more than 30,000 homes, Ms Dixon said. The supercar manufacturer said it had delivered 1,653 of its cars to 30 different countries in 2015. A second shift has been created in its Woking factory to cope with demand for its cars, some of which retail for £900,000. Business Secretary Sajid Javid MP said the announcement showed Britain's auto industry was "thriving". The new roles will be created in the Surrey company's production, quality and logistics departments. The company currently employs about 1,500 people, with 500 working in production - where the majority of the new jobs will be created. McLaren said the second shift is scheduled to start in February and will take production rates from 14 to 20 cars per day. Chief Executive Mike Flewitt said the increase in sales was partly driven by the introduction of the firm's cheapest model the "Sports Series", which costs from £150,000. The other two models of car they produce are the more expensive "Super Series" and "Ultimate Series". He said: "The levels of customer orders tells us that now is the time to invest in the second shift and 250 new production team members to ensure that we are able to reach our assembly objectives once the full model range is available." Mr Javid, who was due to visit the plant on Thursday, said: "I was particularly impressed to hear that over half of all the components and parts that go into their cars are manufactured here in the UK, and this is creating countless more jobs in the supply chain." In June 2015 the company announced its annual turnover was £475.5m.
Rubbish sent to landfill on South Tyneside has been reduced by two thirds, the council has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Sports car maker McLaren Automotive has announced it will create 250 new jobs following a "record year".
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Nobody was injured when the windows of a Volkswagen Golf were shot out in the restaurant's car park at St Andrews Quay on 2 January. Humberside Police said the arrested man had been bailed until April. A number of other people have been arrested over the past few weeks. Police said inquiries were continuing. Whitaker, who was born in Co Down, was named Irish Man of the 20th Century in a public vote in 2001. His work in the finance department set the blueprint for a plan that reversed the Republic of Ireland's economic problems in the early 1960s. Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Enda Kenny described TK Whitaker as "in every sense a national treasure". Thomas Kenneth Whitaker, who turned 100 last month, was 39 when he was appointed as the Secretary General at the Department of Finance in 1955. When he took over as Secretary General he concluded that a radical new approach was required. This thinking resulted in the First Programme for Economic Expansion and was embraced by Taoiseach Sean Lemass. It would increase foreign investment in Ireland, spur economic growth and cut unemployment rates. In 1965, Whitaker would also help organise an unprecedented meeting between Taoiseach Sean Lemass and the Prime Minster of Northern Ireland Terence O'Neill. While this early effort at reconciliation was unsuccessful - it did undoubtedly lay the foundations for future agreements in Northern Ireland. In 1969 he became Governor of the Central Bank and after retiring from that role he was twice appointed to Seanad Éireann. For 20 years up to 1996 he was chancellor of the National University of Ireland. Rochdale Council has introduced a Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) which includes a ban on swearing, skateboarding and begging. Lara ten Caten, legal officer for human rights group Liberty, accused the council of curbing residents' rights. But the authority's leader Richard Farnell said the council was trying to stop "drunken and abusive idiots". Two other councils, Kettering and Salford, currently have swearing bans as part of their PSPOs, which were introduced in 2014 to cut anti-social behaviour in towns and cities. Ms ten Caten said: "These proposals are a staggering misuse of power which would unjustifiably curb the rights and freedoms of Rochdale residents. "The swearing ban is so vaguely defined it would prove impossible for anyone to know whether they were breaking the law or not, while a blanket ban on begging will criminalise some of the most vulnerable people in the town. "PSPOs are blunt instruments incapable of alleviating hardship or providing support. Sadly they are regularly being used to sweep anything or anyone 'inconvenient' from the streets." "Until the government opens its eyes to the harm these powers cause, it's up to our local authorities to act responsibly." Mr Farnell, who heads the Labour-led council, said: "With all the horrific human rights abuses happening around the world right now, I would have thought Liberty had bigger things to worry about. "We are clamping down on a small minority of antisocial ne'er-do-wells who drunkenly shout and swear and harangue shoppers in our town centre. "The council is spending £250m transforming Rochdale town centre and we are not going to let a small number of drunken and abusive idiots spoil it for everyone else."
Police have arrested a 21-year-old Hull man on suspicion of conspiracy to murder in connection with a shooting incident at a McDonald's in the city. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The economist and former public servant TK Whitaker has died aged 100 in Dublin. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A council's town centre ban on swearing has been labelled a "staggering misuse of power" by a civil liberties group.
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Assembly chief executive Claire Clancy said a contractor agreed to return £4,000 because the firm was previously warned "there could be a problem". She called the sum "disappointing". In August, a woman admitted receiving £100,000 from the assembly, after officials were duped into believing they were paying for cleaning services. Six payments were made to Tracey Baker, 44, between October 2013 and June 2014. Ms Clancy told the Public Accounts Committee on Tuesday that legal advice had been taken to see whether the loss should be shared with the contractor Total Support Services "because of the steps we had taken to notify the contractor that there could be a problem and their failure to use the proper control processes". "We came to a negotiated settlement with the contractor," she said. "It was only £4,000 of the £104,000 that they agreed to meet, which we found disappointing." There was not enough thought about vehicles reflecting routes and a "one size fits all" approach was wrong, the cabinet member for refuse told BBC WM. But the council said most people who had received wheelie bins for recycled waste said streets were now cleaner and the service was working. A two-week review of all vehicles and routes started this week. Updates on this story and more from Birmingham Lisa Trickett said collections were fine in "99.9%" of streets in the city. But she said: "There was not enough thought given when the routes were planned. "Local intelligence was not used to shape the service. "My point to managers was when they were designing the specification, surely they actually took the time to think of the roads and the routes... and what vehicles would need to be reflected? That was not the case." She said there were a number of roads in the city where "normal-sized wagons" had been deployed where it was now apparent other vehicles were needed. "You cannot overhaul a service like the fleet and waste service that we inherited without some problems. "I sincerely apologise for all of the problems that have been caused over the Christmas period." Edgbaston resident Pranav Gupta said his recycled waste had not been properly collected since November, when the wheelie bin system had been introduced on his street. "They never actually bring a recycling waste wagon to collect the rubbish, even if it's reported as a missed collection." Andy Williams will work in the British Embassy in Washington advising British cyber security companies on how to promote their products in the US. Mr Williams started his career with BT before moving into security software. He spent five years working for the US government as its international trade advisor to US IT security firms. Mr Williams will take up the post in April. He said: "This role will involve working with UK and US business and government to help boost transatlantic cyber security deals in support of the UK's aim to achieve £2bn in cyber security exports by 2016. "The US currently represents the largest global market for cyber security at over $40bn (£26.4bn) and this market is expected to grow to over $60bn (£39.5bn) by 2019." The appointment was one of a series of measures to help UK businesses tackle cyber security challenges and came as Prime Minister David Cameron met US President Barack Obama in Washington, with cyber security on the talks' agenda.
Only £4,000 out of £104,000 of public money the assembly paid into a fraudulent bank account was recovered, a committee of AMs has heard. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Wagons used to empty recycling wheelie bins in Birmingham are too wide to fit down some streets, the council said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An online security expert originally from Swansea has been appointed as the first UK cyber envoy to the United States.
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I have reported on the coal industry in one way or another for 35 years and even as big chunks of it were sold off, the idea that all of it would shut down in my lifetime is still hard to take in. Yet as a convoy of vehicles from court-appointed administrators drove past me to take possession of Hatfield Main Colliery just outside Doncaster, it marked the final chapter of more than two decades of struggle to save the pit. During that time commercial operators have come and gone, forcing the workforce to step in twice to invest their own money to keep it alive. The end of Hatfield's precarious hold on survival became inevitable towards the end of 2014 as international coal prices dropped so low that it was cheaper for power stations on its own doorstep to burn fuel from Russia or Columbia. "There's deep frustration here," I was told by John Grogan, the former Yorkshire MP who chairs the worker and management partnership that has been running the pit since 2013. "Coal burning isn't going away any time soon in Yorkshire. In fact this winter 40 per cent of our electricity will come from coal, except that it's all going to be Columbian or Russian. "Some people would say there's blood on that coal because the item on every agenda at Hatfield was health and safety. That's not true in Columbia." Hatfield, which would have celebrated its centenary next year, had always been seen as the pit that refused to die despite the odds being heavily stacked against it. Back in 1994 when the then publically-owned industry was put up for sale few would have bet that Hatfield would be the last survivor of the dozen pits then still working in the South Yorkshire coalfields. The pit was seen as such a poor prospect at the time of that mass-privatisation that British Coal could not find a commercial operator willing to take it over. It was left to the management and its 230-strong workforce to rescue their own pit with a buy-out. Seven years later as profits dipped coal production was suspended and Hatfield mothballed. Then along came Richard Budge, the Nottinghamshire entrepreneur whose RJB Mining company had bought up virtually every other colliery in the original privatisation of the English coalfields. By 2007 Richard Budge and RJB Mining had parted company and he came up with a scheme to get himself back into the industry by buying and re-opening Hatfield with a view to building a futuristic 'clean-coal' power station on the site which would provide a ready-made market. The re-hired workforce backed the plan enthusiastically. A site was cleared and access roads, a roundabout and even signposts pointing to the power station were put in place. That was as far as the plan got. The roads and even the signs are still in place, but when promised foreign investment never materialised plans for the power station were abandoned. The pit struggled on under a new commercial operator, but in 2013 the workforce had to step in again with their own money topped up by as loan from the National Union of Mineworkers. Hatfield's final shutdown leaves Kellingley Colliery in North Yorkshire as the last working pit in the country. It too is living on borrowed time with its closure scheduled for December this year.
It was with a sense of disbelief that I turned up with a satellite television truck a few days ago to report on the closure of the last deep mine in the coal fields of South Yorkshire.
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McCann was appointed as Paul Hartley's successor last week, with the team sitting second bottom of the Scottish Premiership. Calderwood guided Kilmarnock and Ross County to safety and believes man management is key. "You've got to try to take the pressure off the players," Calderwood, 62, said. Kilmarnock were the first to appoint Calderwood as a troubleshooter, bringing the former Aberdeen and Dunfermline manager in to succeed Jim Jefferies in January 2010, with the team second bottom of the top flight with 20 league games remaining. Despite succeeding at Rugby Park, Calderwood was not appointed full-time and in February 2011 Ross County took him to Dingwall with the team second bottom of the second tier, then known as the First Division. Calderwood steered County to eighth place and safety. Former Dundee, Hearts, Rangers and Scotland winger McCann has five games to try to move the Dens Park side out of the relegation play-off position, after a run of seven straight defeats resulted in Hartley's sacking. "There's a certain pressure, obviously, and a lot of money involved," Calderwood said. "It's very difficult, but the main thing is to try to keep them bubbly, lots of talking. It's no use them going in [with the attitude] 'aw no, here we go again'. "There might have been times when you thought, 'I'm going to give him a rollicking', but that wouldn't work out. You would go up instead and say, 'is everything alright with you?' You would do a lot more talking than you would normally do. "You try to keep them with a smile on their face, coming into training, making wee jokes - [assistant manager] Jimmy Nicholl was brilliant at it, so they weren't coming in with their heads down." There have been other instances of Scottish clubs making appointments towards the end of the season to achieve safety, although not as late in the campaign as Dundee. Kilmarnock brought Lee Clark to Rugby Park last season with the team third bottom of the Premiership table. Clark's side finished in the relegation play-off place, but he oversaw a 4-1 aggregate victory against Falkirk across two legs to achieve safety. The Englishman went seven games before winning his first match as Rugby Park manager, though, and Calderwood won only one of his first five games in charge of Killie. At Ross County, he drew his opening three games and won only one of his first seven, which illustrates that the appointment of a new manager does not always bring an immediate upturn in results. This season, four Premiership clubs have changed manager during the season, with mixed results across their first five games. Calderwood believes there is enough talent in the Dundee squad to steer the team to safety, with the bottom six sides now all facing each other in the remaining five games. "It's not down to managers, it's down to the players," Calderwood said. "If you've got good people, okay you can have had a bad season, but you can still make it. You've just got to be as positive as you can be. "If the players can take that on board, you hope they're going to be good enough and you can have the luck in the games."
Jimmy Calderwood saved two clubs from relegation and says Neil McCann must raise the spirits of the Dundee players.
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The all-night service begins on the Victoria and Central lines on Friday. It will spread to the Jubilee, Northern and Piccadilly lines this autumn. Supt Chris Horton, of British Transport Police (BTP), said about 100 officers would be on patrol. He added: "There should be no reason why people can't be as safe at night as they are in the day." The service will run on Friday and Saturday evenings. Tube services usually end at about 00:30 on many lines. London Mayor Sadiq Khan has given £3.4m towards the cost of providing a visible police presence. Ch Supt Horton said policing the Night Tube would be no different to tackling the weekend rush and the main policing challenge would be dealing with people who were "a bit worse for wear" after drinking alcohol. He said: "Making sure that we look after people, which is our main purpose, but also making sure that people behave themselves and don't cause other people to fear crime. "That is the main challenge for us but it's the same issue we have on a Friday and Saturday at the moment." BTP officers are "determined to make sure it's a safe environment" and will focus on known "hotspots" in central London and at the far ends of the network. Eight new 24-hour buses will also start service this Friday, the mayor said. Mr Khan said: "The routes will go hand-in-hand with the Night Tube to help Londoners get to and from their front door throughout the night. "It's another key step in helping everyone travel quickly and safely at night, and another boost to unlocking the full potential of our night-time economy."
Passengers will be as safe on London's Night Tube as they are on the daytime service, police have said.
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Held on Friday and Saturday, the event was marking its 10th anniversary. Revellers turned up in the Wester Ross town to see acts such as Utah Saints, Twin Atlantic, Shed Seven, The Undertones, Alabama 3, Public Service Broadcasting and Hunter and the Bear. About 2,500 people attended the event on each of the days it was held. This year's event was sold out before any of the acts were announced. The Channel Island, which has a population of around 100,000, is hoping to follow Gibraltar and take part in European Championship qualifiers. Jersey is currently classed as a county by the English Football Association. Under Uefa rules, non-sovereign nations cannot be members, but the Jersey FA said earlier this summer it was hopeful of changing the European football governing body's mind. In May 2013, Gibraltar, which is a British Overseas Territory, was accepted as a full member of Uefa, European football's governing body. Gibraltar is the smallest Uefa member in terms of population, behind San Marino (just over 32,000), Liechtenstein (approximately 37,000) and the Faroe Islands (just under 50,000). While Jersey is self-governing, it is a crown dependency of Great Britain, with the Queen as head of state. However, the island is already recognised as a nation in its own right by the International Cricket Council, and its team reached the final qualifying tournament for the World Twenty20 this summer. There are two Jersey-born players currently playing in the Football League - Ipswich striker Brett Pitman and Rochdale midfielder Peter Vincenti - while former Scunthorpe United and Motherwell manager Ian Baraclough grew up in the island. The island's most famous player is undoubtedly Graeme Le Saux, who won 36 caps for England and the Premier League title with Blackburn Rovers, as well as playing for Chelsea and Southampton. Jersey's footballers currently play in the island's league, the Jersey Football Combination, and take on Guernsey in the annual Muratti vase clash every year. The island also competes in the football competition at the biennial Island Games and has a side in the FA Inter-League Cup, which they won in 2012, allowing them to represent England at the Uefa Regions Cup the following year.
The Loopallu music festival took place in Ullapool at the weekend. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jersey is to make a bid to join Uefa and play international football.
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Sterling rose 1% against the dollar to $1.2490 after UK inflation in February rose to 2.3%, driven by rising fuel and food prices. The stronger pound weighs on companies that earn their income abroad. At the close, the FTSE 100 was down 0.69% at 7,378.34 points, with mining companies the top five fallers. Glencore was the biggest casualty, falling 4.24%, followed by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, each down about 4%. However, another miner, Fresnillo led the risers with a 1.64% jump. The gold miner benefitted from a rally in the precious metal's price, which is now at a three-week high. The London market has risen for the past four trading sessions in a row, notching up three record closes along the way. However, sterling's rise to its highest level since 23 February has raised worries about how it may hurt profits when London-listed multinationals repatriate profits back to the UK. Connor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex, said: "The pound's post-inflation increase boost continued into the afternoon, creating a heavier and heavier weight for the FTSE. "It will be now interesting to see whether the pound can maintain these gains as attention shifts to next week's triggering of Article 50, or whether its current highs merely give it more room to fall." The mid-cap FTSE 250 index hit a record high in early trading, before turning negative. The index ended down 0.86% at 18,988 points. Across Europe, Germany's Dax was down 0.7% and the Cac 40 in France was 0.2% lower. On the oil markets, the price of Brent crude was down 0.7% at $51.24 a barrel, with traders left unconvinced by the possibility of Opec extending output cuts beyond June.
The FTSE 100 closed down amid worries over the impact of a stronger pound and concerns that US President Donald Trump faces opposition to promised reforms.
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The Accounts Commission report says Scotland's 32 councils have a total of £12.1bn of debt from borrowing. It argues councils need to make better use of information to help councillors make informed decisions and scrutinise borrowing. But, council organisation Cosla argues authorities are managing their debts prudently. The Scottish government welcomed the report and said councils should work to implement its recommendations. Although councils have to balance their budgets, borrowing is a major source of funding for investment in key services like schools or roads. The report says councils are meeting professional requirements but need to do more to set out the longer term implications of borrowing and other debt on their finances. The councils' total debt has changed little over the last three years although more than half of councils have increased their borrowing levels over the last decade. Authorities have other debt of £2.7bn from Public Private Partnerships, bringing their total council debt across Scotland to £14.8bn. This report says the 32 councils have developed strategies to suit their own local priorities and needs, but warns they are not always highlighting the strategic importance of borrowing and treasury management or providing evidence of long-term affordability and sustainability. It also argues scrutiny needs to be improved through better training for councillors, cutting out jargon to make reports clearer and ensuring governance arrangements are solid. Douglas Sinclair, chair of the Accounts Commission, said: "This is a highly complex technical area. Councillors don't need to know every detail but they do need to know enough to ask the right questions. "This is a critical part of council business which requires close and effective scrutiny, particularly in times like this when budgets are so tight. "We hope this report will help councillors and officers make improvements through clearer information and wider analysis of options so that they can be confident that their borrowing policies deliver best value in the longer term." Cosla, which represents the bulk of councils, said authorities are managing their borrowing prudently to ensure investment in local services. Its finance spokesman Councillor Kevin Keenan said borrowing was vital for councils as they were under "increasing financial pressures" from falling funding and high demand for services. He added: "Councils undertake borrowing for many reasons and the fact that they borrow to invest in infrastructure should not automatically be seen as a bad thing. "Councils have played a significant role in boosting the local economy through these challenging times and investment in capital infrastructure has been a key aspect of this. This was a position supported and indeed encouraged by the Scottish government. "In short, councils are managing their borrowing prudently in order to ensure investment in the vital services." However, a spokesman for the Scottish government said it expected councils to act on the report's recommendations. He added: "It is for each local authority to take decisions on what level of capital investment and associated borrowing is prudent, affordable and sustainable and to assess the long-term financial impact of decisions taken. "Scottish councils continue to get a good deal from the Scottish government, despite the impact of the UK government's cuts to Scotland's budget."
Better scrutiny is needed of council borrowing, according to a report from the public spending watchdog.
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The 26-year-old caused a massive upset to beat the former US Open champion 3-6 7-5 6-3 6-3 and reach the third round. It comes after a struggle at the end of 2016 following a heartbreaking defeat by Stan Wawrinka at the US Open. "There were some tough times after the Wawrinka match," he said. "I still think about that match on the court today. It's not easy when you had the opportunity to close out the big match and then lose. "Yeah, I'm happy it happened. But, you know, hopefully there will be no more dark times, as you put it." World number 51 Evans squandered a match point in the fourth set of his third-round match with two-time Grand Slam champion Wawrinka in September. He was devastated afterwards and finished the year with three defeats from four matches - all against lower-ranked opposition. But he is now into the third round of a Grand Slam for only the fourth time of his career - and the first time in Melbourne, where he will face Bernard Tomic. Evans said the victory over Cilic was the "biggest" of his career, as he joined compatriot Andy Murray in the third round. He did it wearing shirts and shorts bought from a shop after his kit deal with Nike expired in December and was not renewed. "I just went to the store and bought a load of clothes the other day, plain clothes," he said. "What was it, Sunday? Sunday or Saturday, yeah. $19.99 (£12), the shirts are. "I think I bought about 18 shirts, something like that. I went back this morning to buy some more. They're not the best quality, to sweat in and wash. "I only wore one shirt today. I'm good until Friday." Evans will face Australian Tomic in the last 32, a man he beat in four sets in the second round of the 2013 US Open. It was a win the Birmingham player enjoyed, after the world number 27's father suggested he was not good enough to have a practice hit with his son. "I'm not going to bother saying anything about that again. He confronted me about that. We'll leave it at that," he said on Wednesday. "I'd say it's a 50-50 match. So, yeah, I'm looking forward to playing him."
British number three Dan Evans believes he has come through a difficult period in his career after beating world number seven Marin Cilic at the Australian Open.
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David Miller, 56, died at his house on Patterdale Walk, Northampton, in the early hours of Tuesday morning. Zena Kane, 35, Ian Cuthbertson, 49, and 37-year-old Michael Hallett, all of no fixed address, have appeared at Northampton Magistrates' Court and will appear at Northampton Crown Court on Friday. Three others are being questioned.
Three people have been charged with with the murder of a man who was stabbed to death at his home.
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The 18-year-old Austrian youth international had been on trial with the Clarets and will initially join up with the development squad. Smith, who can also play in defence, joined Arsenal after leaving Chelsea two seasons ago. "Hopefully in future years I can add something to the squad," he told the club website. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. He was arrested after the items were found at a house at Forest Street in west Belfast on Saturday. Guns, ammunition and suspected pipe bomb parts were discovered by bomb disposal officers. The man is due to appear before Belfast Magistrates' Court on Tuesday. The company's flotation is the largest on the London market so far this year. Its shares were initially offered at 240p each, after its private equity owners sold a 51% stake in it. Worldpay processes more than 30 million mobile, online and in-store transactions every day. The company employs about 4,500 staff, mostly in the UK and the US. Company chief executive Philip Jansen described Worldpay's listing as "a significant milestone". He added that more than £1bn had been invested in the company, "helping [it] become an advanced technology-led organisation". Worldpay was sold by the Royal Bank of Scotland in 2010 to its current owners, Advent International and Bain Capital. In terms of money raised, the flotation also means it is Europe's largest private equity-backed listing. In a statement, the London Stock Exchange Group said Worldpay's decision to list in the UK "confirms London's position as [a] leading global financial centre" and "highlights [an] exceptional investor appetite".
Burnley have signed midfielder Renny Smith on a three-year contract following his release by Arsenal. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A 52-year-old man has been charged with possessing a firearm, explosives and ammunition in suspicious circumstances. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Payments processing firm Worldpay has listed on the London Stock Exchange in a sale raising more than £2bn.
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Wednesday's attack close to the heavily protected diplomatic area killed about 90 people and injured about 350 others. No group has said it carried out the attack, but Afghan intelligence officials suggested the Haqqani network - militants allied with the Taliban - carried it out with Pakistan's support. Pakistan's foreign ministry spokesman described the claim as baseless. Stability in Afghanistan was in Pakistan's interests, said Nafees Zakaria, and the "rhetoric of blaming others" to hide Afghanistan's own failures was unhelpful. Pakistan and Afghanistan frequently accuse each other of supporting and harbouring militants who carry out cross-border attacks. Afghanistan on Wednesday cancelled all planned cricket fixtures with Pakistan in response to the blast. The Taliban has denied any role in the attack. There has been no comment from so-called Islamic State (IS), which has a small presence in eastern Afghanistan and has been quick to claim attacks in recent months. Wednesday's attack was one of the deadliest in Kabul in recent years. A tanker truck packed with explosives was detonated close to the German embassy near Zanbaq Square at 08:20 local time (03:50 GMT). The bomb's target is unknown but many of those who died in what witnesses described as a massive explosion were Afghan civilians. Mohammed Nazir, a driver for BBC Afghan, died in the blast. Buildings, including a number of embassies, were damaged and more than 50 vehicles destroyed. On Thursday relatives of people who have been missing since the attack were searching hospitals in the capital. "I do not know if my son is dead or alive. I have to see and find him," one relative, Besmillah, told Reuters news agency outside the Emergency Hospital. "I went to every single hospital but could not find my son." There have been several high-profile attacks in Kabul and around the country in recent months. Some people have been hitting out at the government for not doing enough to stop them. "I have lost my brother in the blast and the government is constantly failing to provide us with security," AFP news agency quoted one resident as saying. The Afghan interior minister has suspended four police officers over the blast, including the sheriff in charge of policing the diplomatic enclave and the head of the regional counter-terrorism department. The blast has been condemned around the world. US President Donald Trump called Afghan leader Ashraf Ghani to express condolences. The US has about 8,400 troops in Afghanistan, with another 5,000 from Nato allies. The Pentagon has reportedly pressed Mr Trump to send thousands more troops back to try to counter gains by the Taliban. More than a third of Afghanistan is now said to be outside government control. Early on Thursday a soldier died when a suicide bomber targeted a security checkpoint near the airport in Jalalabad.
Pakistan has rejected an Afghan claim that it was involved in a massive bomb attack in the capital, Kabul.
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Deputy Defence Minister Nikolay Pankov said it was too early to speak of defeating terrorism, after a campaign that has bolstered Syria's government. Russian forces started leaving Syria on Tuesday after Monday's surprise announcement by President Vladimir Putin. Some have now landed in Russia. A second day of peace talks is being held aimed at resolving the conflict. UN Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura, who is mediating in the talks, welcomed the Russian decision. "The announcement by President Putin on the very day of the beginning of this round of Intra-Syrian Talks in Geneva is a significant development, which we hope will have a positive impact on the progress of the negotiations," he said. Russian defence ministry video showed the first group of aircraft taking off from Hmeimim air base in Syria on Tuesday morning and in flight. Hours later, Russian TV showed planes arriving in the southern Russian city of Voronezh, where they were greeted on the tarmac by priests and crowds waving balloons. Su-24 tactical bombers, Su-25 attack fighters, Su-34 strike fighters and helicopters were returning home, the TV said. But Mr Pankov said a Russian air group would remain. "Certain positive results have been achieved... However, it is too early to talk about victory over terrorism. A Russian air group has the task of continuing to strike terrorist facilities," he was quoted by Ria news agency as saying. The war in Syria has raged for five years and claimed the lives of more than a quarter of a million people. Millions have fled the conflict, but nearly 18 million people still live in the war-torn country - so what is life like for them? Find out here Another senior official, upper house defence committee head Viktor Ozerov, said as many as two battalions - some 800 servicemen - could remain in Syria after the withdrawal to guard Hmeimim and the naval base at Tartous, Interfax news agency reported. Military advisers training Syrian government troops would also stay, he added. Meanwhile Kremlin chief-of-staff Sergey Ivanov said Russia would keep its advanced S-400 surface-to-air missile system in place. "We are leaving completely reliable cover for the remaining contingent... To effectively ensure security, including from the air, we need the most modern air defence systems," Russian media quoted him as saying. The Russian force reduction was announced during a meeting on Monday between Mr Putin and his defence and foreign ministers. Russia is a key ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and his office sought to reject speculation there was a rift between the two countries, saying the move was mutually agreed. It has received a guarded welcome from Western diplomats and the Syrian opposition. The Russian air campaign started last September, tipping the balance in favour of the Syrian government and allowing it to recapture territory from rebels, but on Tuesday the defence ministry announced the withdrawal. It is not clear how many military personnel Russia has deployed, but US estimates suggest the number ranges from 3,000 to 6,000, AP reports. Russia had long insisted its bombing campaign only targeted terrorist groups but Western powers had complained the raids hit political opponents of President Assad. In a statement, the Syrian government said the plan was agreed between the two countries. Most participants in the Syria conflict agreed to a cessation of hostilities, which has been largely holding despite reports of some violations on all sides. Meanwhile, the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria has presented its report on war crimes committed by all sides in Syria's war to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Its chairman Paulo Pinheiro said the task of pursuing war criminals should not wait for a final peace agreement as there was now "hope of an end in sight". Russia is one of President Bashar al-Assad's most important international backers and the survival of his government is critical to maintaining Russian interests in Syria. Russia has a key naval facility which it leases at the port of Tartous and has forces at the Hmeimim airbase in Latakia. In September 2015, with rebel forces advancing on Latakia, Russian forces launched an air campaign which President Vladimir Putin said was aimed at "stabilising" the Syrian government and creating conditions for "a political compromise" that would end the five-year conflict. In March 2016, Mr Putin ordered the "main part" of Russia's forces to withdraw from Syria, saying their mission had "on the whole" been accomplished. Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said Russian aircraft had flown more than 9,000 sorties over almost six months, killing more than 2,000 "bandits" and helping Syrian government forces regain control of 10,000 sq km (3,860 sq miles) of territory, including 400 population centres. The claims have not yet been independently verified, but it is clear the air campaign turned the tide of the war in favour of Mr Assad, allowing Syrian government ground forces to regain territory around Latakia, in the southern province of Deraa and around the divided northern city of Aleppo. Moscow stressed that its air strikes only targeted "terrorists", but activists said Russian aircraft had mainly bombed Western-backed rebel groups and civilian areas. In December, Amnesty International said Russian aircraft appeared to have directly attacked civilians by striking residential areas with no evident military target, which it warned might amount to war crimes. Russia's defence ministry dismissed the report as containing "fake information". However, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported in early March that 1,733 civilians, including 429 children, had been killed in Russian air strikes, along with some 1,492 rebels and members of the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front, and 1,183 Islamic State (IS) militants.
Russia will continue air strikes in Syria despite the withdrawal of most of its forces, a senior official has said.
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The campaigners will argue that an independent health regulator needs to be established to protect the public. Last Wednesday the Penrose Inquiry into the contaminated blood disaster found that the NHS in Scotland put public safety at risk. It had continued to collect blood from prisoners during the 1980s. The inquiry recommended that everyone who had a blood transfusion before 1991 should be tested for Hepatitis C. The pressure group Patients First - which was set up by a number of NHS whistleblowers - will call on Health Secretary Shona Robison to protect patients by properly implementing the Health and Safety at Work Act in the NHS. Earlier this month a health and safety expert said dozens of opportunities to prosecute NHS managers had been missed because the act was not being observed. Former crown prosecutor Roger Livermore told BBC Scotland that, because of a failure to bring prosecutions, there was a "never-ending stream of avoidable harm". Patients First is also calling on the Scottish government to follow the recommendations of the "Freedom to Speak Up Review" which was released last month by Sir Robert Francis QC, who led the public inquiry into the Stafford Hospital scandal. It said many staff who voiced concerns about patient safety were victimised, bullied or hounded out of their jobs. Patients First wants Ms Robison to order health bosses to end the suspension, dismissal, bullying and victimisation of whistleblowers. Nurse-turned-whistleblower, Rab Wilson, said: "The best thing that Shona Robison and Nicola Sturgeon can do here is to ensure that the Health and Safety at Work Act is applied rigorously in future in the NHS and that an independent health regulator is re-appointed as soon as possible. "These are the only measures that will ensure and guarantee in law that a scandal such as the haemophilia sufferers disaster can never happen again. "The Penrose Inquiry as we know made one recommendation - 'to prevent unnecessary suffering going forward'. "I believe that the SNP government will take these measures as they are the only sensible, practical and legal solutions that will ensure once and for all that, in 'going forward', families and individuals will never in the future have to suffer a tragedy of this magnitude." A Scottish government spokesperson said: "Work is already under way to develop a robust package of measures which encourage and support staff to raise any concerns they may have about practices in NHS Scotland. "We have welcomed Sir Robert Francis' Freedom to Speak Up Review, which will inform our thinking, and have recently consulted on introducing a duty of candour across health and social care. "Healthcare Improvement Scotland has wide ranging powers to scrutinise the NHS and to make sure services are improved across the NHS, while all NHS boards are fully accountable to the Scottish government." It is part of the Royal Mint's "Queen's Beasts" series, which celebrates ten creatures from centuries of royal heraldry. The red dragon design will appear on one ounce and quarter-ounce gold coins, as well as on a two-ounce silver coin. Designer Jody Clark said: "I wanted to replicate the sense of strength and courage the beasts were designed to convey."
Patient safety campaigners are due to meet Scotland's health minister to demand stronger measures in the wake of a series of health scandals. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Welsh dragon is to feature on a range of gold and silver bullion coins.
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Frank Cushnahan was appointed to Nama's Northern Ireland advisory committee in 2010 and served until November 2013. He later worked with the Pimco fund which was interested in buying Nama's Northern Ireland property portfolio. Pimco's bid collapsed after it found out he was to share in a success fee it had intended to pay to legal advisors. The National Assets Management Agency (Nama) was set up to deal with impaired loans that were damaging Irish banks after the 2008 financial crash. Nama's sale of its entire Northern Ireland property loan portfolio and the process leading up to it has been the subject of allegations. In a statement given to Dublin's Sunday Independent newspaper, Mr Cushnahan said: "It has been suggested that, in the event of the purchase of the loan book by Pimco, I was to receive £5m. "I was never a party to any such agreement." He went on to say that he was never "a paid advisor" to Pimco, but understood "there was the possibility" the fund could appoint him to an executive role after it had bought the portfolio. A report by Ireland's Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG) disclosed that Mr Cushnhan was a consultant to seven different Nama debtors. Mr Cushnahan declared his interests at Nama meetings and in annual declarations as required. Nama has said meetings attended by Mr Cushnahan never involved the disclosure of debtor-specific information. But the C&AG said potential conflict of interests arose that "would not be managed sufficiently" just by withholding debtor-specific information. Mr Cushnhan said: "Those responsible for appointing me to the Nama Advisory Committee and those in charge of Nama were fully aware at the time of my appointment of the fact that I was an advisor to a number of Nama debtors. "I am pleased that the report of the C&AG acknowledges that fact. "In other words, to the extent that there was ever a conflict between my role as an advisor and my other roles within Northern Ireland at that time, it was always disclosed and known." Nama has reported Mr Cushnahan to Republic of Ireland's ethics watchdog, the Standards in Public Office Commission (Sipo), over what it believes were other undeclared conflicts of interest. These matters are not directly addressed in Mr Cushnahan's statement. Mr Cushnahan also comments on the BBC NI Spotlight programme which broadcast a recording made in 2012 in which he accepted a £40,000 cash payment from a Nama debtor, John Miskelly. Mr Cushnahan states: "I was asked to assist Mr Miskelly at a time when I was informed that Mr Miskelly was terminally ill. "All dealings that I had with Mr Miskelly were entirely lawful, a fact that has subsequently been conceded in a further public statement by Mr Miskelly."
The man at the centre of the Nama controversy has said he was "never a party" to an agreement which would have led to him being paid £5m.
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Three unrelated shootings since Christmas Eve included a man being injured in Shipley, a car damaged in Huddersfield and a police vehicle being shot on Christmas Day in Bradford. West Yorkshire Police said the incidents were being taken "very seriously". No one was seriously injured. The first incident happened in Market Square, Shipley, at about 04:00 GMT on Saturday. One man is thought to have been shot but not seriously injured after a collision between a vehicle and pedestrian. In the second incident, a car was damaged in Bradley Mills, Huddersfield, at 15:10 on Saturday. A car, thought to be a black Mercedes, drove down Harpe Inge carrying people wearing masks. One person got out and a firearm was discharged, police said. Another car, thought to be a grey Mercedes, was shot. No one was injured. In the early hours of Christmas Day, a police vehicle windscreen was shot on Sackville Street in Bradford. Officers had been called to reports of an assault and at about 04:40, while speaking to the victim, a shot was fired at the windscreen. No one was injured by the firearms discharge but one person was injured as a result of the assault and a 19-year-old man has been arrested. While the firearms incidents are not linked, they are being taken "very seriously" and witnesses should contact West Yorkshire Police. Assistant Chief Constable Russ Foster said: "Despite this recent spate of gun-related crime, the chances of becoming a victim of such an incident in West Yorkshire are very low." Last January, 80 illegally-held guns were taken in West Yorkshire in a weapons surrender which is due to be repeated in the new year.
Police in West Yorkshire are "very concerned" by an "unprecedented" level of firearms incidents over Christmas.
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They say a man and his ex-wife placed dating advertisements to lure the women to their home. The suspects - Wilfried W, 46, and Angelika B, 47 - were arrested last Wednesday and charged with manslaughter. The man denies any wrongdoing but his partner is reported to have confessed. Detectives believe there may be further victims and are searching the couple's home in Hoexter, north-western Germany. Police have for weeks been investigating the death of a 41-year-old woman, known as Susanne F, who they believe was held hostage and tortured in the couple's residence. That case came to light when the couple allegedly tried to drive the badly injured woman to her home in Lower Saxony in April. But their car broke down and as they waited for a taxi, the woman's health deteriorated. They called an ambulance, but the woman died later in hospital, where suspicions about her injuries arose and the police were warned. At a news conference on Tuesday, police said they now believed the couple had killed and dismembered another young woman before disposing of her remains in their fireplace. Annika W, 33, also from Lower Saxony, died in August 2014. Like Suzanne F, she had responded to a dating advertisement in late 2013. "The victim suffered again and again from very serious physical torture like being hit all over the body, chained to heaters, being enslaved and beaten," chief prosecutor Ralf Meyer told a news conference. "Sometimes the victim had to sleep on the bare floor of cold rooms. Hence, her physical condition became worse and worse." He said that in summer 2014, the victim reached a life-threatening state, as a consequence of which she died on 1 August, 2014. Police believe the motive for the murders was more likely to be power-related than sexual. Angelika B is reported to have made a full confession, arguing that she only obeyed the man after also being tortured by him. Further investigations are said to support her statement. The head of the investigation, Ralf Oestermann, said officers were conducting a detailed forensic examination of the house. "We cannot totally exclude the possibly that another woman died there," he told reporters. The full names of those involved in the case have not been released inline with German privacy laws.
Police in Germany investigating the deaths of two women say they were the victims of a couple who held them hostage and tortured them.
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Ronnie Berlack, 20, and Bryce Astle, 19, were junior members of the US team. They were part of a group of six who were descending from a mountain near the Rettenbach glacier, the venue for the races that will open the 2015 Alpine Skiing World Cup. Officials in Tyrol say avalanche alerts had been declared following days of heavy snowfall and mild temperatures. The four other skiers with Mr Berlack and Mr Astle managed to escape the avalanche unhurt. It is believed that they triggered the avalanche on the 3,000m (10,000 feet) Gaislachkogel mountain near Solden, and were buried under the snow. The president of the US Ski and Snowboard Association Tiger Shaw said, the two victims were "outstanding ski racers who were passionate about their sport". Alibaba is the world's largest online marketplace while Suning is a China-wide chain of electronics stores. Alibaba's shares rose more than 2% overnight on Wall Street while stocks in Shenzhen-listed Suning surged to the maximum 10% limit on Tuesday. The firms plan to link their online and offline models, so customers could see goods in Suning stores then buy online. Under the deal, Suning will also open an online store on one of Alibaba's shopping websites. The deal will see Alibaba investing 28.3bn Chinese yuan (£2.9bn; $4.6 billion) in Suning, making it the second largest shareholder with almost 20%. Suning will in turn invest 14bn yuan to acquire a 1.1% stake in Alibaba. In a statement, the two companies said the partnership would combine the strengths of online and offline commerce. "Over the past two decades, e-commerce has become an inextricable part of the lives of Chinese consumers, and this new alliance brings forth a new commerce model that fully integrates online and offline," Alibaba CEO Jack Ma said. The firms said that customers could, for example, go into one of Suning's 1,600 shops to try out a product before buying it online on Alibaba's website. Goods could then be delivered in as little as two hours through Suning's existing logistics network, spanning most of China with distribution centres and delivery stations. Mr Ma seeks to diversify New York-listed Alibaba as it faces increasing domestic competition from fellow online giants Baidu and Tencent. Two weeks ago Alibaba said it would invest $1bn in its cloud computing business to increase its international presence. In June, the company launched an online bank aimed at serving smaller businesses struggling to obtain credit from large banks. Kevin Harris, 51, claimed he had stabbed his brother Mark, 47, in self-defence at their home in Summers Road, Farncombe, in February. After a seven day trial at Guildford Crown Court, he was found guilty of murder and was sentenced. Harris has been ordered to serve a minimum of 12 years. During the trial, the court heard they had a disagreement about money with Harris admitting he had stabbed his brother to death before disposing of the knife in a canal. Det Ch Insp Karen Mizzi from Surrey Police said: "This has been a deeply upsetting time for the family and although it is good that justice has been served, this is little comfort to them. "I hope the conclusion of the judicial process will give the family some form of closure."
Two American skiers have been killed in an avalanche in the Austrian Alps while skiing near their training base. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Alibaba and Suning stocks jumped on news the Chinese online giant will take a major stake in the offline retailer. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The brother of a personal trainer who was found stabbed to death has been jailed for life for murdering him in a row over money.
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Police arrested the actor on Friday night on Sixth Street in Austin's entertainment district. The actor has had numerous brushes with the law throughout his career. Witnesses said LaBeouf initially caused a disturbance on Friday after being refused a drink at a bar, and later jaywalked in front of police. Officers are reported to have subdued him and put him in handcuffs before arresting him, the TMZ website reported. Jail records quoted by the AP news agency say that he spent Friday night in the Travis County Jail and has now been released. In September 2014, he pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct over his disruption of a Broadway performance of Cabaret. He was also arrested after a fight in a bar in Los Angeles in 2011, although he was later released without charge. Shortly before that arrest, a publicist for the actor said that he was receiving treatment for alcoholism. There have also been a series of instances where LaBeouf is said to have behaved erratically in public - on one occasion appearing on the red carpet with a paper bag on his head, on which was written: "I am not famous anymore." LaBeouf - who also writes screenplays - found fame at age 14 as the star of the Disney series Even Stevens and has also starred in three Transformers films. The star's movies include Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps. The game, between BBC 5 live and Match of the Day, is being played in the snow and rain outside BBC MediaCityUK in Salford and ends on Saturday at 18:15. Savage netted the first of 500 goals scored in the opening 24 hours. All-time Premier League top goalscorer Shearer is captaining the Match of the Day team while ex-Wales player Savage leads the radio outfit. Follow live coverage of Sport Relief's Battle of the Five-A-Sides Shearer is putting in a 09:15-21:15 stint on Friday after Savage played for 12 hours on Thursday. After a gruelling 720 minutes of football, Savage said he "went all out early on" because he was "trying impress everyone." "Well for the first three or four hours I was running around like I did when I was in the youth team, but then I remembered I'm over 40 and my legs started to hurt." Shearer said "It was like rolling back the years with the old celebration, it was good to be back scoring goals again." McFly's Danny Jones said he was "knackered" after enduring 11 hours on the snowy overnight stint in Salford, but added "the energy is amazing, everyone is playing football so well." The game has seen current and former professionals like Joe Hart, Adnan Januzaj and Kevin Kilbane getting involved as well as celebs like hip-hop legend Fatman Scoop. Man United's winger Januzaj was not impressed with persistent foul play by Scoop and sent him off. "Did you see what the guy did to me?" Scoop protested, adding: "The guy puts a red card on me. I don't know what a red card is. Then everyone tells me to get off!" About 1,000 people will play 30 minutes alongside the pundits. The 57-hour duration of the epic encounter has been chosen since it is the equivalent of a Premier League club's entire season. Since 2002, Sport Relief has raised more than £262m for disadvantaged people in the UK and overseas. Teams: Southampton (1988-92), Blackburn (1992-96), Newcastle (1996-2006) Premier League appearances: 441 Premier League goals: 260 (all time-record scorer - Wayne Rooney is second, on 192) Honours: Premier League winner (1994-95) England caps: 63 England goals: 30 Played in the 1996 and 2000 European Championships and the 1998 World Cup Teams: Manchester United (1993-94), Crewe Alexandra (1994-97), Leicester City (1997-2002), Birmingham City (2002-05), Blackburn Rovers (2005-08), Derby County (2008-2011), Brighton & Hove Albion (loan in 2008) League appearances: 537 League goals: 37 Honours: League Cup winner (1999-2000) Wales caps: 39 Wales goals: 2
Hollywood star Shia LaBeouf has been arrested and charged with public drunkenness, police in Texas say. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Robbie Savage and Alan Shearer have captained more than 50 matches in a 57-hour five-a-side game for Sport Relief.
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Dog lover Chris Packham and cat lover Liz Bonnin travel around the UK finding out more about the animals and what makes each so special. But which do you prefer? Are you crazy about cats or do you dig dogs? Get typing and let us know! Cats V Dogs: Which is Best? is on BBC One at 8pm Thursday 4 February Cats because you can play with them and they will cuddle you as well. They are really fluffy too. Nicole, Peterborough, England I prefer dogs, as I have always loved dogs, and a lot more responsibility is needed. Amy I prefer dogs, specifically because you can teach them tricks and they are so energetic whereas cats are quite lazy! Evie, Bedford, England I love dogs because you really get to know them. DOGS RULE! Lucy, Bucks, England I prefer dogs because when cats stand on you their claws dig in your leg. Mia, Wolverhampton, England Dogs because they are more interactive and they are lovable and so cute. Jessica, Milton Keynes I like cats better than dogs because you don't have to spend as much money or time on them. Sarah, Wales I think cats are amazing because they are cute and fluffy. Olivia, Rochdale Send your comments to [email protected] You must ask your parent, teacher or guardian for permission before you send us a comment. We may show your comment on our website or in our TV bulletins. We'll show your first name and which town you're from - but we won't use your details for anything else. The team hid cancer killing viruses inside the immune system in order to sneak them into a tumour. Once inside, a study in the journal Cancer Research showed, tens of thousands of viruses were released to kill the cancerous cells. Experts labelled the study "exciting," but human tests are still needed. Using viruses to destroy rapidly growing tumours is an emerging field in cancer therapy, however one of the challenges is getting the viruses deep inside the tumour where they can do the damage. "There's a problem with getting enough virus into the tumour," Prof Claire Lewis from the University of Sheffield told the BBC. She leads a team which uses white blood cells as 'Trojan horses' to deliver the viral punch. After chemotherapy or radiotherapy is used to treat cancer, there is damage to the tissue. This causes a surge in white blood cells, which swamp the area to help repair the damage. "We're surfing that wave to get as many white blood cells to deliver tumour-busting viruses into the heart of a tumour," said Prof Lewis. Her team takes blood samples and extract macrophages, a part of the immune system which normally attacks foreign invaders. These are mixed with a virus which, just like HIV, avoids being attacked and instead becomes a passenger in the white blood cell. In the study, the mice were injected with the white blood cells two days after a course of chemotherapy ended. At this stage each white blood cell contained just a couple of viruses. However, once the macrophages enter the tumour the virus can replicate. After about 12 hours the white blood cells burst and eject up to 10,000 viruses each - which go on to infect, and kill, the cancerous cells. At the end of the 40-day study, all the mice who were given the Trojan treatment were still alive and had no signs of tumours. By comparison, mice given other treatments died and their cancer had spread. Prof Lewis said: "It completely eradicates the tumour and stops it growing back." She said it was a "ground-breaking" concept, but cautioned that many remarkable advances in treating mice failed to have any effect in people. She hopes to begin human trials next year. Dr Emma Smith, from Cancer Research UK, said: "Harnessing the body's own immune system to deliver a deadly virus to tumours is an exciting approach that many scientists are pursuing. "This study shows it has the potential to make chemotherapy and radiotherapy more effective weapons against cancer. She said the research was still at an early stage and tests to show it is safe and effective in humans are still needed. Dr Kate Holmes, head of research at Prostate Cancer UK, said: "It demonstrates that this innovative method of delivering a tumour-killing virus direct to the cancer site is successful at reducing the development of advanced prostate tumours in mice which have been treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy. "If this treatment goes on to be successful in human trials, it could mark substantial progress in finding better treatments for men with prostate cancer which has spread to the bone."
A brand new TV programme is trying to answer a very important question: which make the best pets - cats or dogs? [NEXT_CONCEPT] An experimental "Trojan-horse" cancer therapy has completely eliminated prostate cancer in experiments on mice, according to UK researchers.
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The 26-year-old Brazil international will initially join the Italian champions on a season-long loan costing 6m euros (£5.3m). Juventus will then have the option to buy Costa for 40m euros (£35.4m) at the end of his loan spell. Costa joined Bayern from Shakhtar Donetsk in July 2015, scoring 14 goals in 77 appearances and winning two Bundesliga titles and the German Cup. On Tuesday, Bayern signed Real Madrid forward James Rodriguez on a two-year loan deal. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Brazil winger Douglas Costa has joined Juventus from Bayern Munich on loan.
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Theranos pioneered new cheap and quick tests, but regulators investigated the firm after ex-employees told a newspaper the tests were unreliable. Founder Elizabeth Holmes once ranked as America's richest self-made woman. This summer, Forbes magazine estimated her worth as next to nothing. In a letter on the company's website, Ms Holmes said the facilities' closures would affect 340 staff, 40% of the workforce. She said the company's work would continue: "After many months spent assessing our strengths and addressing our weaknesses, we have moved to structure our company around the model best aligned with our core values and mission. "We will return our undivided attention to our miniLab [portable blood-testing product] platform. Our ultimate goal is to commercialise miniaturised, automated laboratories capable of small-volume sample testing, with an emphasis on vulnerable patient populations, including oncology, paediatrics and intensive care." It comes after a controversial few years for the Silicon Valley firm, which was launched by Ms Holmes in 2003 and grew to a valuation of $9bn by the summer of 2014. The firm said that its Edison device could test for conditions such as cancer and cholesterol with just a few drops of blood obtained via a finger-prick, rather than the vials needed through intravenous extraction. But in October 2015 a report by The Wall Street Journal claimed that the device produced inaccuracies. This led to an investigation by the US government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which later revoked the company's licence to operate in California and banned Ms Holmes from running a lab for at least two years. Theranos is appealing some of the CMS's sanctions, but has had other investigations opened against it by bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and Food and Drug Administration. Nikhil Krishnan, a technology industry analyst at CB Insights, said the closures were inevitable after the firm's troubles. "Once their retail clinic partners stopped their ties with the company and entire batches of tests were deemed faulty, it became increasingly clear that the company would have to exit the direct-to-consumer blood testing market." He added: "The company has to completely overhaul its image in the medical and scientific communities and work very closely with regulatory bodies to ensure every aspect of its device is sound. "Even then it's unclear if they will ever be able to fix their reputation." The Aberdeen-based company said it was continuing to be hit by a downturn in the oil and gas industry. It said it had taken measures to cut costs but had not been able to meet levels needed and 130 employees may now be made redundant. Pilots union Balpa has called for a summit to be held urgently on jobs security and said it would be fighting to save the threatened posts. Consultation between Bristow and unions will now get under way. The End of History, made by Fraserburgh firm BrewDog, is 55% alcohol, and came in 12 bottles made using dead stoats, squirrels and a hare. Advocates for Animals had branded the bottles "perverse" and a "stupid marketing gimmick" and Alcohol Focus Scotland also criticised the move. One of the buyers told the BBC Scotland news website it was a piece of history. BrewDog co-founder James Watt said all 12 bottles sold out within four hours. The Aberdeenshire firm said the beer was the world's strongest and most expensive. One buyer, economics student Chris Mair, 33, of Suffolk, who lives in Edinburgh, bought a bottle made using a stoat. He said: "It's one of a set, I have bought special BrewDog beers before. "If I had not bought this one I would always have wished I had. "It's a piece of brewing history, I think it will always be the world's strongest beer." He explained: "It will be a collectors item. You would be mad to open it. It would be like opening a rare bottle of whisky."
Controversial US blood-testing company Theranos is shutting clinical and medical facilities and slashing jobs, three months after its founder was banned from owning a laboratory. [NEXT_CONCEPT] North Sea helicopter operator Bristow could make 130 of its staff redundant. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A controversial beer served in bottles made from stuffed animals and costing £500 each sold out in a few hours.
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Cullen has made 23 appearances for the Bantams since signing on an initial five-month deal in August. The 20-year-old also played in 17 games for the club last season after joining them on loan in February. "Everything about the club - the staff, the players, the fans - they have all been brilliant with me," he said. Kyrgios, who missed a match against Czech Republic last year with a back injury, was absent with a virus. "Twice he has faked it," Tomic was heard telling team captain Lleyton Hewitt during his game with John Isner. But Hewitt said: "Nick gave everything he had to try to be available and there's no doubt he was sick." Tomic made the comment, which was picked up by courtside microphones, during a changeover in his four-set defeat by Isner, which gave the USA an unassailable 3-1 lead. "Nick's sitting down in Canberra," claimed the 23-year-old Germany-born world number 20, who later said he played with an injured wrist. Kyrgios' withdrawal left Sam Groth to open the tie against world number 11 Isner at Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, and the 28-year-old was beaten 7-6 (7-2) 6-2 6-2. Tomic levelled the match but the Bryan brothers beat Hewitt - who came out of retirement to play - and John Peers to re-establish the advantage. Isner's 6-4 6-4 5-7 7-6 (7-4) victory over Tomic put the Americans in the quarter-finals for the first time in three years. Speaking after the match, Tomic said Kyrgios was on the entry list for the ATP event in Indian Wells, which begins on Thursday. The 20-year-old played in the tournament last year, two weeks after sitting out Australia's match against the Czech Republic. Tomic said he would "lose respect" for his former doubles partner if he competed there this year. Kyrgios later sent a tweet which mocked Tomic's 28-minute loss to Finn Jarkko Nieminen at the 2014 Miami Open - the quickest match in ATP history. "Let's not forget who holds the quickest loss on the ATP tour lol #how many minutes again," read the tweet, which Kyrgios later deleted. He added: "Just don't expect me to have your back anytime soon." Blencathra was put up for sale by the Earl of Lonsdale in May 2014 to help settle a £9m inheritance tax bill. The Friends of Blencathra raised about £246,000 in an attempt to buy it for the community. However, they admitted defeat in September when told they would need to offer in excess of £1.7m. The fell was later withdrawn from sale. In a statement on its Facebook page, the friends group said it has been advised by the Charity Commission that it is legally obliged to return the donations, including those which were less than £10. Spokesman Dave Wheeler said the group wished to commence the refund procedure "as soon as possible" and was in discussion with the commission over the process. Any money that cannot be returned will be given to charities working to preserve the Lake District's landscape. A commission spokeswoman said responsibility fell to the group to contact donors. "They must also advertise to give any other donors who can show they made a donation the opportunity to reclaim or disclaim their donation. "Trustees are permitted to retain from each donation a sufficient amount to cover the administrative expenses of return," she added.
League One side Bradford City have extended West Ham midfielder Josh Cullen's loan spell at the club until the end of the season. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Australian number one Bernard Tomic has accused team-mate Nick Kyrgios of faking illness to avoid the Davis Cup defeat by the USA in Melbourne. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A community group set up to buy a mountain in the Lake District has been told to return thousands of pounds it received in donations.
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Mohammed Iqbal Hussain, 23, from Castle Road, Walsall, in the West Midlands, has been charged with four counts of funding terrorism under the Terrorism Act 2000. Mohamed Suyaubur Rohaman, aged 32, of the same address, has been charged with one count of funding terrorism. Both men will appear before Westminster Magistrates' Court on Tuesday. The pair were arrested on Tuesday 12 January. Two other men arrested by counter-terrorism officers in Walsall on Thursday 14 January on suspicion of Syria-related terrorism offences have been released on police bail. West Midlands Police said the men were on bail with strict conditions until a date in April pending further enquiries. Officers said the arrests were part of an ongoing investigation and were intelligence-led. They added there was no immediate threat to public safety.
Two men arrested on suspicion of Syria-related terrorism offences have been charged.
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The Commons Environmental Audit Committee warns that tracts of polluted soil are a potential health hazard in many towns because the government has stopped grants to decontaminate them. And agricultural carbon emissions are said to be growing because careless farming allows soil to blow away. The government said it was protecting soils, but would review the new report. The committee says soil is a Cinderella subject - little mentioned but vital for food and flood prevention. Soil also stores carbon in the form of organic matter - but if soil is handled badly, this carbon can escape to the air, contributing to climate change. The MPs say to meet the UK's promises on the climate, the government needs a clear plan for protecting agricultural soil. They complain that the government relies on soil protection rules linked to farm subsidies. These rules, they warn, are weak, loosely enforced, and focus on preventing further soil damage rather than encouraging restoration of damaged fields. Committee chairman Labour's Mary Creagh said: "Soil degradation could mean that some of our most productive agricultural land becomes unprofitable within a generation. "Every tonne of carbon we can retain in soil will help us meet our carbon budgets and slow climate change." A government spokesman replied: "The health of our soils and our 25-year plan for action on the environment will set out a comprehensive, long-term vision to protect and enhance our natural environment for generations to come." But other experts reinforced the committee's concerns. Prof Phil Haygarth, from Lancaster University, said: "Soils are arguably the most complex systems on Earth but are intimately linked to human security and the integrity of the wider environment. "Any lack of recognition of this is just short-sighted and will inevitably lead to environmental and societal problems in the future." The report says the UK's arable soils have seen a worrying decline in carbon levels since 1978. The other focus of the report is on contaminated land. There was previously a limited national pot of cash to help local councils clean up polluted land, but this has now been closed completely. The government says planning policy sets a clear framework for the clean-up of land to be developed. But Ms Creagh countered: "Relying on the planning system to clean up contaminated land may be fine in areas with high land values, but it means that contamination in poorer areas will go untreated. Ministers must rethink their decision to phase out clean-up grants." There were potentially now 300,000 contaminated sites in the UK, she added. Prof Kirk Semple, also from Lancaster University, said: "Our industrial heritage means that hundreds of thousands of sites across the country are contaminated by chemicals, heavy metals, tar, asbestos and landfill. "Often materials were disposed of on site without the environmental safety regulations we take for granted today. "Defra's complacent decision to withdraw contaminated land grants presents a real danger that contaminated sites are being left unidentified with consequential public health impacts." The government has declared an objective of safeguarding all soils by 2030, but the MPs say there are no policies in place to deliver that promise. National Farmers Union spokesman Mark Pope told BBC News that it endorsed flexible and voluntary approaches to conserving soil. "Soil characteristics vary significantly in the UK, meaning there is no single method or panacea solution available to improve soil health," he said. Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin
Ministers are failing to protect Britain's soils on farmland and in cities, MPs say.
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Ms Clinton, the liberal daily said in an editorial, is "one of the most broadly and deeply qualified candidates" in modern history. An outsider in the Republican race, the NYT called Mr Kasich the "only plausible choice". The backing comes days before Iowa voters become first to make their pick. The endorsement of Ms Clinton from one of the top-selling titles in the US is no surprise; the NYT backed the former secretary of state in her losing bid for the presidency against Barack Obama in 2008. The NYT had praise for Ms Clinton's main rival, Bernie Sanders, but the paper said he "does not have the breadth of experience or policy ideas that Mrs Clinton offers". Assessing the Republican field, Saturday's editorial gave a damning verdict on the two leading contenders. Frontrunner Donald Trump "has neither experience in nor interest in learning about national security, defence or global trade", the paper said. Ted Cruz "will say anything to win". Instead, the NYT plumped for Ohio Governor John Kasich as "the only plausible choice for Republicans tired of the extremism and inexperience on display in this race". Mr Kasich tweeted he was "proud" to gain the NYT's support, which may be something of a mixed blessing given that the paper has been a frequent focus of criticism for US conservatives. The Proteas were bowled out for 250 before Australia chased 127 on the fourth evening of the day-night Test. David Warner made 47, Steve Smith 40 and Matt Renshaw, the England-born opener, 34 not out off 137 balls. Earlier, Stephen Cook converted his overnight 81 into 104 for South Africa as Mitchell Starc took 4-80. Victory ended Australia's run of five successive Test defeats, and was their first in any form of cricket since beating Ireland in a one-day international in September. South Africa's series triumph was their third in a row in Australia. The match ended a fractious tour during which South Africa captain Faf du Plessis was fined for ball-tampering, and a member of their security staff jostled with an Australian journalist at the airport. Australia play the first of three one-day internationals against New Zealand on 4 December before hosting Pakistan in a three-Test series from 15 December. South Africa's next assignment is the visit of Sri Lanka, with a three-Test series starting on 26 December.
The New York Times has endorsed Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican John Kasich in their bids to become their parties' presidential candidates. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Australia avoided a first Test series whitewash at home with a consolation seven-wicket victory in Adelaide as South Africa won the series 2-1.
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Two passengers in a Peugeot 206 suffered fatal injuries in the crash on 10 March on Upperton Road, Leicester. They have been named by police as David Anger, 24, and Christopher Needham, 37, both from Leicester. A 35-year-old man arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving has been released on bail. Updates on this story and more from Leicestershire The Peugeot driver suffered serious injuries but has since been discharged from hospital. Two people in the truck sustained minor injuries in the crash, which caused damage to a nearby shop. The incident has been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), Leicestershire Police said.
Two men who died when a car being followed by an unmarked police vehicle collided with a tipper truck have been named.
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BBC Sport takes a look at some quirky statistics behind one of F1's most iconic races - the Singapore Grand Prix.
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Darren Stephenson-Bennett, from Newton Aycliffe, crashed on a roundabout at the junction of the A68 and A1(M) near Darlington, County Durham. The 28-year-old was last seen at a party on Saturday 27 August and was found dead by police seven days later after a phone call from the public. He was confirmed dead at the scene but police say they are not sure when the crash happened. It is thought Mr Stephenson-Bennett failed to negotiate the roundabout and went through a chevron board before hitting some trees, police said. Insp Ed Turner said: "It's inevitable those questions will be asked of the police as to why we haven't found him before this time. "There was a comprehensive missing from home investigation undertaken by Durham Constabulary. We didn't locate him. "He went missing on the Saturday and wasn't reported missing until the Tuesday so we had a bit of catch up to play with." In a statement, Mr Stephenson-Bennett's family said: "Darren was a much-loved husband, father, son and brother who was devoted to his family and his daughters. "Darren was a popular person who would do anything for anybody. "He was well-liked by all who knew him, extremely laid back and easy going, and no-one had a bad word to say about him."
A driver found dead in a car in bushes had been missing for up to a week.
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O'Briain announced in January he was stepping down after five years on the show, to spend more time on his comedy. Dee will preside over the experts and audience as they pick apart Alan Sugar's candidates, and the outgoing contestant, each week. Comic Romesh Ranganathan will also join the show as a regular panellist. Dee has his own experience of the main show after taking part in Comic Relief Does The Apprentice in 2009. He said he was "very much looking forward to hosting You're Fired" and hoped "that the luckless candidates will see me as the friendly face at the end of a difficult time in their lives". Romesh Ranganathan said he was very excited as he is a "massive fan" of The Apprentice. "I love You're Fired and am looking forward to putting all the questions to the candidates that people at home want to see asked. "I also have a number of business proposals of my own that I think Lord Sugar will be pretty interested in…" The Apprentice and You're Fired return later this year. The main show will also have a new look, as Nick Hewer has departed from his role as Lord Alan's right hand man. He announced in December he would be stepping down after 10 years on the series. His replacement will be Claude Littner - a former Amstrad director, who viewers will know as the interrogator who ruthlessly tears apart candidates CVs during the interview stage of the reality show. Allan George Matthews, 56, admitted to "removing tissue" from the man "without consent or authority" at a motel in Port Macquarie, north of Sydney. Police said 52-year-old victim posted an online ad "requesting assistance with a medical issue". He had been suffering for years after being kicked in the groin by a horse. Police became aware of the case in June when the man attended hospital after the the wound he suffered during the operation became infected. Officers raided Matthews' home and seized medical equipment, firearms and four bottles of what they suspected to be amyl nitrate. Prosecutors alleged that Matthews was not authorised to perform such a procedure as he was not a qualified or registered medical practitioner. He also pleaded guilty in court this week to illegally possessing a gun and two counts of possessing or attempting to prescribe a restricted substance. The toll badge will cost up to €130 (£103; $162) a year, depending on a car's age, engine size and emissions. German motorists will pay tolls for local roads as well as the Autobahn motorways. But that will be offset by a cut in their motor vehicle tax. The European Commission has warned that the new toll may be discriminatory. A letter from EU Transport Commissioner Violeta Bulc, quoted by German media, says the offset scheme for German drivers - to spare them additional road costs - may discriminate against foreigners, thereby violating EU law. The toll - known in German as "Pkw-Maut" - is not yet law. The plan is to introduce it in 2016. The Social Democrats (SPD), in a coalition led by the Christian Democrats (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU), cautioned that important details would still have to be hammered out in parliament. "The Pkw-Maut won't leave the Bundestag [lower house] in the form in which it arrived," said Soren Bartol, a senior SPD politician. The plan presented by Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt gives foreign drivers the option of buying a 10-day toll badge for €10 or a two-month one for €20. Camper vans will be taxed, along with cars. But motorbikes, electric cars, adapted cars for the disabled and ambulances will all be exempt. Mr Dobrindt, of the CSU, said the new toll could generate €500m annually to spend on road infrastructure.
Comedian Jack Dee has been announced as the new host of the Apprentice spin-off show You're Fired, replacing Dara O'Briain. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An amateur surgeon in Australia has pleaded guilty to removing the left testicle of a man who could not afford professional medical treatment. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The German government has approved plans for a controversial road toll which will include charging foreigners for using the famous Autobahn network.
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The hosts came closest to breaking the deadlock when Lee Molyneux hit the crossbar in the 67th minute after being played-in on goal by Aaron Wildig. The Shrimps were also denied by a superb save from Ben Garratt, who got down smartly to hold a swerving long-range effort by Michael Rose, while Oliver Turton almost put a right-wing cross into his own goal. Crewe also had their moments in front of goal, with their best effort coming from James Jones on 62 minutes as he ran on to Charlie Kirk's lay-off but saw his shot from 12 yards brilliantly tipped over by Barry Roche. The Morecambe keeper denied the same Crewe player in the first half with a flying save before the visitors went close with long-range efforts from Turton and Alex Kiwomya flying just wide. Report supplied by the Press Association. Match ends, Morecambe 0, Crewe Alexandra 0. Second Half ends, Morecambe 0, Crewe Alexandra 0. Ryan Edwards (Morecambe) is shown the yellow card. Attempt missed. James Jones (Crewe Alexandra) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left from a direct free kick. George Cooper (Crewe Alexandra) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Andrew Fleming (Morecambe). Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Luke Conlan. Callum Ainley (Crewe Alexandra) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Michael Rose (Morecambe). Attempt missed. Kevin Ellison (Morecambe) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left. Corner, Morecambe. Conceded by James Jones. Substitution, Crewe Alexandra. Callum Ainley replaces Charlie Kirk. Substitution, Morecambe. Ntumba Massanka replaces Aaron Wildig. Attempt missed. Alex Kiwomya (Crewe Alexandra) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Dean Winnard. Attempt blocked. George Cooper (Crewe Alexandra) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Alex Whitmore. Corner, Morecambe. Conceded by Oliver Turton. Foul by Paul Mullin (Morecambe). Billy Bingham (Crewe Alexandra) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Dean Winnard. Corner, Morecambe. Conceded by Oliver Turton. Lee Molyneux (Morecambe) hits the bar with a right footed shot from the right side of the box. Substitution, Morecambe. Lee Molyneux replaces Peter Murphy. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Barry Roche. Attempt saved. James Jones (Crewe Alexandra) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Attempt saved. Kevin Ellison (Morecambe) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Attempt missed. Andrew Fleming (Morecambe) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Attempt missed. Aaron Wildig (Morecambe) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the right. Attempt saved. Kevin Ellison (Morecambe) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Attempt missed. Michael Rose (Morecambe) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Second Half begins Morecambe 0, Crewe Alexandra 0. First Half ends, Morecambe 0, Crewe Alexandra 0. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Dean Winnard. Substitution, Morecambe. Paul Mullin replaces Aaron McGowan because of an injury. Corner, Crewe Alexandra. Conceded by Dean Winnard. Attempt saved. Andrew Fleming (Morecambe) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Aaron McGowan (Morecambe) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Zoumana Bakayogo (Crewe Alexandra). Attempt missed. Chris Dagnall (Crewe Alexandra) right footed shot from more than 35 yards is close, but misses to the left.
Morecambe and Crewe had to settle for a point each in League Two after two stunning goalkeeping performances in a goalless draw at the Globe Arena.
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They all want to be in Wales on Saturday, 3 June 2017. The 2017 Champions League final at Cardiff's Principality Stadium will be the biggest sporting event to have been staged in Wales with an estimated 200m people in more than 200 countries likely to watch the game on television. Not only will it bring an estimated £45m into the Welsh economy, but it is hoped the world's most watched annual sporting event will push Wales further into world football's corridors of power after an historic Euro 2016 campaign. The 2017 Champions League draw The eyes of the world will be on Cardiff next summer with the likes of Manchester City manager Guardiola, who helped Barcelona win the Champions League in 2009 and 2011, and Bayern Munich boss Ancelotti, a three-time European Cup winner, eyeing up the trophy. But the final could have a Welsh flavour with winger Bale aiming to lift a third Champions League trophy after Real Madrid's successes in 2014 and 2016. "After winning the first Champions League, I knew the Super Cup was in Cardiff, so it was an amazing moment for me personally," he said, in reference to the 2014 Super Cup final at Cardiff City Stadium, where Madrid beat Sevilla 2-0 thanks to two Ronaldo goals. "But to have the Champions League final in my home town is an even bigger motivation." Wales is still riding a wave of euphoria with Welsh football fans excited to see what Chris Coleman's national team can achieve in their 2018 World Cup qualifying campaign after the side reached the last four of Euro 2016. "Everybody is mad for football, especially after the European Championship where we were able to perform so well," Bale, 27, said. "Football is hopefully on the rise more than ever. And I think the city of Cardiff itself is growing and is now attracting big sporting events." Cardiff hosted the 1999 Rugby World Cup final and six FA Cup finals while the new Wembley was being built, but hosting an event that draws a larger TV audience than American football's Super Bowl cements the city's status as a sporting capital alongside the likes of Milan, Berlin and London. And with Cardiff City Stadium also hosting the Women's Champions League final on Thursday, 1 June, it is set to be a real festival of football. The Football Association of Wales' 2017 Champions League project director Alan Hamer says Thursday's group stage draw has made the size and importance of the event hit home with teams like Barcelona, Juventus and Borussia Dortmund involved in the competition. "Seeing the draw and the teams that could make it to Cardiff brings it all to life which is great and exciting," he said. Wales fans were able to watch their team's Euro 2016 games at a Cardiff fan zone in Cooper's Field, which had a capacity of 6,000 people. But Hamer says Cardiff's Champions League fan zone will be "much bigger". "We're expecting at least 200,000 people to visit the fan zone," he said. "The biggest attraction is the trophy... It's there for four days and there's no charge to go to the fan zone and people can have their photo taken with the trophy. "Discussions are still ongoing, but hopefully we will be able to confirm a location [for the fan zone] fairly soon, but it is going to be in Cardiff within close proximity of the stadium." Hamer has admitted staging such a big event will be a challenge, but is confident transport problems which affected fans travelling to games in Cardiff during the 2015 Rugby World Cup would not be repeated. The 74,500-seat Principality Stadium will be referred to as "The National Stadium of Wales" in the build-up to the Champions League final with European football's governing body, Uefa, unwilling for the venue to be named after a sponsor. The same happened to Munich's Allianz Arena in 2012 when it was re-branded as the Football Arena München. The Welsh government says the nation "will gain the largest television exposure ever for an event" when it hosts the Champions League final and Hamer hopes the event will help build on Wales' success at Euro 2016 - their first major tournament for 58 years. "One of the reasons the FAW wanted to stage the Champions League final was purely to develop football, to get more children and adults involved," he said. "The Euros have been fantastic for us because it means that we're starting from a very high level, we've got the entire country enthused in football. "We need to make sure that the Champions League takes it to the next level, that by the end of June next year we've got record numbers of people involved in football across Wales. "Hopefully some of the activities that we have planned as part of our bid, taking the competition around Wales, lots of community football competitions and educational programmes will build on all the good work that has taken place over the last 12 months with the Euros and Welsh football will never be in a stronger position come end of June next year."
Gareth Bale, Cristiano Ronaldo, Pep Guardiola and Carlo Ancelotti have one thing in common.
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The 35-year-old centre-half, who has 89 caps for his country, has won the championship with clubs in his homeland, Russia and Turkey. "This is one of the best feelings that I have in my career and the last time I was a champion at a club was in Fenerbahce," he told Rangers' website. "I want to have this feeling again." Alves, who becomes compatriot Pedro Caixinha's first summer signing, made 36 appearances for Cagliari after joining from Turkish outfit Fenerbahce last summer and helped them finish 11th in Serie A. Rangers finished third in the Scottish Premiership, with Celtic retaining the title and 39 points ahead, but the Portugal defender believes he can add to his winners' medals at Ibrox. "I have this feeling and this desire to win and I think to move here will bring this back to me and to my career," he said. "At almost all the clubs I have played for, I win and I expect to win here for the fans and for the club. I think I can do this here." Alves, who is part of Portugal's squad for the Confederations Cup in Russia, was keen to work with Rangers manager Caixinha. "I know him and I know about the work he did in Portugal and also some players that he coached before," said the defender. "I think he has the quality and he has the ideas to make this club successful again." Alves began his career with Porto and had spells on loan to Farense, Vitoria Guimaraes and AEK Athens before becoming a first-team regular with the Dragons. In his eight years with Porto, he gathered nine major honours, including four Primeira Liga titles, before switching to Zenit Saint Petersburg for £18m in 2010. After winning two Premier League titles and the Super Cup in Russia, he next moved to Fenerbahce for £4.5m in 2013. A Super Lig title and the Turkish Super Cup followed before his switch to Italy. That came after he was part of the Portugal squad that won the European Championships in France, his country's first ever major trophy, with Alves playing in the semi-final victory over Wales. Alves was also in the Porto squad that lost 3-2 to Rangers at Ibrox in a Champions League group stage match in 2005 and recalled "a fantastic environment". Caixinha said that his compatriot would be a "leader" for the team and brings "a winning mentality" to the club. "In my opinion all teams need to be built and organised from the back and Bruno is a very talented and experienced player," the Rangers manager said. "He is also really mature and a leader with a strong character. "What is important is that he is a winner and that is something we all want, to put the club on a winning track again. "Bruno will be a leader in the dressing room and he will demand a lot from himself and others in the squad, both on the pitch and in our training sessions. "The players we are trying to bring to Rangers, we want them to have that character, that experience and that maturity, but also that winning mentality." Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. 28 June 2016 Last updated at 17:19 BST The National Front leader was speaking to BBC Newsnight in her first broadcast interview since the referendum. Ms Le Pen said her party had been given a boost by the result. Read more: Brexit gives FN a boost - Marine Le Pen Watch Emily Maitlis's full interview with Marine Le Pen on BBC Newsnight at 22:30 BST on BBC Two
Portugal defender Bruno Alves says he has joined Rangers to win more titles after completing his move from Cagliari on a two-year contract. [NEXT_CONCEPT] France's far-right leader Marine Le Pen has called the UK's Brexit vote "the most important moment since the fall of the Berlin Wall".
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The 28-year-old, who retained the title he won at London 2012, also claimed gold in the men's 10m air rifle on Monday. It gives Italy four golds and three silvers in the shooting. Campriani's Olympic record score of 458.8 pushed Russia's Sergey Kamenskiy (458.5) into silver. France's Alexis Raynaud claimed bronze with 448.4 points. Find out how to get into shooting with our special guide. Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
Italy's Niccolo Campriani has claimed his second Olympic gold medal of the Rio Games, winning the men's 50m rifle.
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Fans threw fake money at the 18-year-old during Italy Under-21s' 2-0 victory over Denmark on Sunday, and a banner referred to him as 'Dollarumma'. Donnarumma, whose contract expires next year, turned down a new deal last week. Milan chief executive Marco Fassone denied Raiola's claims. He added Raiola and his client's actions could have cost the club 100m euros. Raiola, speaking to the Italian media prior to Sunday's game, had alleged Milan sporting director Massimiliano Mirabelli had put pressure on Donnarumma by telling the goalkeeper he would "spend the season in the stands" if he did not sign. Raiola, who last summer brokered the deal that took Juventus midfielder Paul Pogba to Manchester United for a world-record fee, gave a briefing to three Italian outlets on Sunday, although the interview was not released until after Donnarumma had played. He alleged Milan had imposed a deadline of 13 June for Donnarumma to make a decision on the contract and treated him "like an asset". "I was wrong not to immediately stop this infernal machine - with that pounding we could not say yes," added Raiola. "We took a decision that we didn't want to take. It was nothing to do with money. We were threatened." Donnarumma broke into the Milan first team as a 16-year-old and has made almost 70 appearances for the club. "Gigio was initially convinced to stay at Milan, because at age 14 he chose those colours, after contacts with Inter Milan," said Raiola. "Now there is a genuine risk he could miss a year. His quality makes that improbable, but this is already on the verge of mobbing." Play was briefly halted during the first half of Sunday's European Under-21 Championship game in Krakow after supporters behind a goal threw fake dollar bills into the net. Italy Under-21 coach Gigi di Biagio said Donnarumma was not "unnerved" by the incident. He added: "He behaves as if he is 30 years old and he is capable of dealing with something which goes beyond football." In an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, Fassone said there were "no threats" from Mirabelli that Donnarumma would not play while his contract ran down. "Our position is clear - Donnarumma is not for sale, so will play next season at Milan," said Fassone. "But we cannot risk anything and we are obliged to look for another goalkeeper. "The bitterness here has to do with the unpleasant way the situation was handled - it could've been done without damaging the club, but by leaving like this, they have cost Milan 100m euros." He added that if Donnarumma reversed his decision and stayed, he would be welcomed with "open arms" by the club and eventually its fans.
AC Milan goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma rejected a new contract because he felt "threatened" by the club, not for financial reasons, according to his agent Mino Raiola.
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The government has also frozen their bank accounts and revoked the work permits of foreign employees. The move follows a heated debate in Kenya over a controversial new security bill aimed at fighting militants. The al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab group has been increasingly targeting Kenya for attack. The organisations had been deregistered because of their failure to submit financial records, said Henry Ochido, the deputy head of the government-appointed NGO Co-ordination Board, which oversees their activities. Fifteen are suspected of money-laundering and financing "terrorism", Mr Ochido told the BBC. Some of them were linked to the 1998 twin bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and neighbouring Tanzania, he added. Mr Ochido declined to name the organisations, saying investigations were ongoing. The board acted against them to help "safeguard" Kenya's security following information supplied by intelligence agencies, he said. The decision to target more than 500 organisations is bound to cause an uproar in Kenya, where many fear that the government is using the threat posed by al-Shabab to curb democratic freedoms, reports the BBC's Wanyama Chebusiri from the capital, Nairobi. Many of them appear to be aid agencies and charities which failed to provide financial audit returns, AFP news agency reports. Several of them seem to be Christian organisations, orphanages or groups working in the areas of health and development, it adds. "The NGOs with accounting issues can only be allowed to operate if they successfully go through a thorough vetting process. Otherwise, they will remain deregistered indefinitely," Fazul Mahamed, the executive director of the board, is quoted by Kenya's privately owned Standard newspaper as saying. International medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) is on a separate list of 12 organisations which has been given 21 days to submit audited financial statements, correspondents say. MSF said in response that it had complied with all "reporting obligations" and it was in contact with the board "to clear up any misunderstanding". Last week, Kenya's parliament passed a bill which gave security and intelligence agencies wide-ranging powers, including: Al-Shabab has killed 64 people in two attacks in the north-eastern Mandera region since last month. Non-Muslims were singled out and shot dead in an attack on quarry workers and bus commuters. Last year, 67 people were killed when four gunmen took over the Westgate shopping centre in Nairobi. Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta has said the government will not "flinch" in the campaign to defeat the militants.
Kenya has deregistered 510 non-governmental organisations (NGOs), including 15 accused of links with terrorism, an official has said.
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Midfielder Oguzhan Ozyakup raced on to an Arda Turan through ball to put the home side ahead with a chipped finish. Turan doubled the lead by stealing the ball from a dithering Daley Blind before firing past the weak hands of Jasper Cillessen at the near post. Burak Yilmaz added a third late on to seal a result that means the Dutch can only finish third in Group A. But to achieve that the Netherlands must now rely on Turkey dropping points in their last two games. Iceland confirmed their place at an international tournament for the first time when they secured the point they needed against Kazakhstan. The Czech Republic also qualified automatically after beating Latvia 2-1. Whoever finishes behind the top two will be guaranteed a place in a two-legged play-off against another of the third-placed sides. That is the only path open to the Dutch, but their fate is now out of their own hands after Turkey leapfrogged them with a convincing win. It was the Netherlands' heaviest competitive defeat since 1996, when they lost 4-1 to England at Wembley in Euro '96. "This whole qualification campaign has been incredibly difficult," said striker Robin van Persie. "We still have a chance, but it is no longer in our hands and that is terrible.'' Netherlands play Kazakhstan away on 10 October before their final group match at home to Czech Republic three days later, while Turkey may have a more difficult run-in, playing Czech Republic away and Iceland at home. The last time the Dutch failed to qualify for a major tournament was the 2002 World Cup. Before that, they were absent from the 1982 and 1986 stagings and from the 1984 European Championship. Match ends, Turkey 3, Netherlands 0. Second Half ends, Turkey 3, Netherlands 0. Corner, Netherlands. Conceded by Sener Ozbayrakli. Attempt missed. Robin van Persie (Netherlands) left footed shot from the left side of the box is close, but misses the top left corner. Assisted by Memphis Depay. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Hakan Balta (Turkey) because of an injury. Corner, Netherlands. Conceded by Burak Yilmaz. Ozan Tufan (Turkey) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Memphis Depay (Netherlands) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Ozan Tufan (Turkey). Goal! Turkey 3, Netherlands 0. Burak Yilmaz (Turkey) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top left corner. Assisted by Caner Erkin. Foul by Luuk de Jong (Netherlands). Sener Ozbayrakli (Turkey) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Turkey. Olcay Sahan replaces Oguzhan Ozyakup. Attempt missed. Wesley Sneijder (Netherlands) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Memphis Depay. Jeffrey Bruma (Netherlands) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Burak Yilmaz (Turkey). Attempt missed. Luuk de Jong (Netherlands) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Wesley Sneijder with a cross following a set piece situation. Memphis Depay (Netherlands) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Sener Ozbayrakli (Turkey). Oguzhan Ozyakup (Turkey) is shown the yellow card. Attempt saved. Jeffrey Bruma (Netherlands) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Wesley Sneijder with a cross. Substitution, Netherlands. Luuk de Jong replaces Daley Blind. Hakan Balta (Turkey) is shown the yellow card. Corner, Netherlands. Conceded by Burak Yilmaz. Quincy Promes (Netherlands) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Volkan Sen (Turkey). Foul by Quincy Promes (Netherlands). Ozan Tufan (Turkey) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Sener Ozbayrakli (Turkey) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Memphis Depay (Netherlands) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Sener Ozbayrakli (Turkey). Substitution, Netherlands. Quincy Promes replaces Luciano Narsingh. Foul by Memphis Depay (Netherlands). Oguzhan Ozyakup (Turkey) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Hand ball by Wesley Sneijder (Netherlands). Substitution, Turkey. Mehmet Topal replaces Hakan Calhanoglu. Foul by Jaïro Riedewald (Netherlands). Hakan Calhanoglu (Turkey) wins a free kick on the right wing. Gregory Van der Wiel (Netherlands) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
The Netherlands' hopes of qualifying automatically for Euro 2016 were ended by a heavy defeat in Turkey.
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Capital World Markets (CWM) is also being investigated by City of London Police for money laundering and false representation, the force said. The firm, based in the City's Heron Tower, was raided on 3 March and 10 men and three women were arrested. CWM's website has been removed and it could not be contacted for comment. Computers and documents were seized during the raid, said the City of London Police, and the 13 suspects were questioned and released on bail until September. Det Supt Maria Woodall said: "The primary objective of the arrest phase of this investigation was to stop what we believe was ongoing criminality and prevent people putting their money into CWM's managed funds offering 5% interest per month." She said she needed people to come forward to see how the firm used the funds.
A trading company partnered with Chelsea Football Club is under a police fraud investigation, which has so far involved 13 arrests.
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Tyrone Quinn, 20, of Felling, admitted causing death by dangerous driving, driving while disqualified and having no insurance at Newcastle Crown Court. James Docherty, 17, died at the junction of Redheugh Bridge and Askew Road West in Gateshead at 04:00 BST on Sunday 24 July. Quinn was remanded in custody and will be sentenced on 24 October. Two men also suffered non-life threatening injuries in the crash. Three other men arrested were released with no further action.
A disqualified driver who had no insurance has admitted causing a crash which killed a teenager.
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AG Barr reported pre-tax profits of £30.4m for the year to the end of January, up 25% on the £24.5m the company made a year earlier. Revenue rose by more than 10% to £222.4m. The firm said it had seen strong growth in all core brands. However, it warned that the industry faced higher input costs and continuing consumer caution this year. "AG Barr has maintained its track record of strong financial performance, delivering double-digit sales and profit growth despite the challenging economic environment," said the group's chief executive, Roger White. "The soft drink sector will face tough comparative trading across 2011, as well as further cost volatility and general economic uncertainty." As well as Irn Bru, the Cumbernauld-based firm makes Orangina, Tizer, Rubicon and Ka drinks. Referee Bobby Madden inspected the pitch around 13:15 GMT and judged it to be unfit for play, with several areas covered in water. Hearts, 11 points clear in third place but 11 behind Aberdeen in second, were aiming to continue a run of just one defeat in 16 Premiership matches. They face Hibs in a Scottish Cup fifth-round replay at Easter Road on Tuesday. Partick, in eighth place after a run of just two defeats in 10 matches, host Aberdeen in the Premiership next Friday, 19 February. Italian navy personnel boarded the vessel, which was taken to the Libyan port of Misrata before being released. The Libyan coastguard said the boat was seized in "a peaceful operation" after entering Libyan waters. The vessel did not have a fishing permit and had breached Libyan sovereignty, a spokesman told the BBC. "It was a peaceful operation, no shots were fired," he said. The Italian navy said that military personnel in the area on migrant rescue duties responded to reports of the fishing boat seizure. There were no reports of any injuries. The crew, which had been fishing for shrimp, comprised three Italians and four Tunisians resident in Italy. A spokesman for the Italian fishing co-operative told the BBC that there have been 12 such seizures by Libya since 2005. The gunmen initially appeared to be militia members using an unmarked government boat, the spokesman said. The fishing co-operative has described the incident as "an act of piracy" and said that, since 2005, Libya has insisted that its territorial waters extend more than 112km (69 miles) off shore - much further than international agreements allow. The co-operative said Libya's deteriorating security situation - the country is in effect fragmented with rival parliaments backed by warring militias - had added to concerns about the safety of the crew.
The maker of Irn Bru has reported a sharp rise in annual profits and improved sales in the past two months. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Hearts' Premiership match against Patrick Thistle has been postponed because of a waterlogged pitch. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Italian navy has recaptured a Sicilian fishing boat hours after it was seized by the Libyan coastguard up to 64km off the coast of Libya.
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That is what many environmentalists are asking after the United States delivered a damaging blow to India's ambitious solar power programme this week. In response to a US complaint, a World Trade Organization (WTO) panel has ruled that India's National Solar Mission breaches trade rules. It judged that India's policies on buying locally made solar power equipment discriminates against imports. "The ink is barely dry on the UN Paris Climate Agreement, but clearly trade still trumps real action on climate change," Sam Cossar-Gilbert of Friends of the Earth International said in a statement. But is the decision really as damaging as many commentators seem to think? Let's start at the beginning. One of the biggest achievements at the Paris climate change conference was drawing India into the architecture of international climate agreements. It refused to commit to a ceiling on carbon dioxide emissions but did promise big increases in the carbon efficiency of the economy - the amount of carbon emitted per unit of GDP. A key part of that commitment was the promise of huge investment in renewable technologies, including a vast increase in solar power. India said it would add 100 GW of solar capacity by 2022. That's more than the current solar capacity of the world's top five solar-producing countries combined. And - you guessed it - the National Solar Mission was the centrepiece of the whole shebang. But while the US was carefully reeling India into the climate talks it had simultaneously lodged a complaint with the WTO, arguing that India's solar programme created unfair barriers to the import of US-made solar panels. It is certainly true that India's plans include a "buy local" policy. The Solar Mission is explicitly designed to make India one of the biggest players in the rapidly growing international solar industry. Indeed, developing solar is a key thrust of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's signature "Make in India" policy. And here's where the interesting economic arguments come in. Because the presumption in most of the commentaries I've read on this is that buying local content is necessarily a good thing. Take a look at this article in the online environmental magazine Grist, or this piece in the Huffington Post, which maintains: "The ruling shows that decades-old, over-reaching trade rules are out of sync with the global challenge to 100% clean energy." Lots of economists would say that that is muddle-headed. Think about what the "buy local" rules are really about. They are there to shield local capitalists - Indian-based solar panel companies - from competition from abroad. That means one of two things. Secure behind the protective barrier, they get to pocket extra profits. Alternatively they are able to run less efficient businesses. Either way the people who buy the panels lose out because they end up paying more. The case is made very well in this Forbes article, which argues that the WTO rules are there to right an inherent imbalance between producers and consumers. The problem is that local businesses tend to feel very strongly indeed about creating that comfortable competition-free space, so they lobby government hard for it. Their customers aren't so motivated to make a fuss so the manufacturers tend to win out. That's where the WTO agreements come in, tilting the trade disputes like this in favour of consumers. That is why - runs the argument - the WTO ruling against India will actually have huge environmental benefits. The WTO is ensuring that India's solar ambitions are achieved in the most efficient way possible because the Indian businesses that want to generate solar power get to buy the cheapest solar panels. That is certainly what the American solar industry says. "This decision helps us bring clean energy to the people of India, as that nation's demand for electricity rapidly grows," Dan Whitten of the Solar Energy Industries Association told PV-Tech magazine. India, of course, disagrees. It argues that developing an indigenous solar industry will in time boost international competition and therefore reduce the price of solar panels for everyone. And no doubt India will be tempted to point to the hypocrisy in US trade policy. While the US argues for unfettered free markets in international forums like the WTO, it doesn't practice what it preaches at home. Half of all US states have subsidies for renewables. Perhaps India should file a counter-complaint with the WTO against the US.
Whatever happened to all the talk of international co-operation to tackle climate change that we heard during the climate conference in Paris just a few months ago?
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Kingussie opened their campaign with a 1-1 draw at home to Lochaber. And in an upset of the previous season's form book, Oban Camanachd travelled to Drumnadrochit to record a 3-1 victory over Glenurquhart. Defending champions Newtonmore, Lovat and Skye were sidelined by postponements. MacDonald got Kyles off to a flying start at Fort William with two goals in the opening quarter of the game. The match was suddenly turned on its head just before half-time, though, when a Daniel Stewart strike was followed by Bryan Simpson squeezing in a double just ahead of the whistle. Ross MacRae drew Kyles level soon after the restart and they went ahead again when MacDonald completed his treble. Dunky Kerr added a late fifth to secure an opening win for the 2015 Premiership runners-up. At the Dell, Pat Toal drew first blood for Lochaber just before half-time and so it stayed for half-an-hour. Then Ryan Borthwick grabbed a point for Kingussie, whose last game was a 2-0 relegation play-off victory over Kilmallie. It was only in the latter stages of last season that Oban Camanachd escaped that play-off themselves but they were in fine form for their visit to MacTavish Cup holders Glenurquhart. Willie Neilson bagged a penalty and Daniel Cameron also scored to put Camanachd 2-0 up within 24 minutes. Neale Reid provided a vital lifeline for Glenurquhart just before half-time but the home side could not build on it. Malcolm Clark got Camanachd's third. The most significant result in the National Division, at the Winterton, was only a goalless draw but it involved sides which were previously two leagues apart. Inveraray arrived in that division after finishing bottom in the Premiership while visitors Bute got there as they recovered from a traumatic period by winning the South Division title. Elsewhere in the second tier, Beauly won 5-2 at Inverness and Glasgow Mid Argyll eclipsed Ballachulish 4-0 at Yoker. They are 43 points clear at the top of Division One and only need six points from this week's game against second-placed Middlesex to retain the title. "We need a handful of points and we're set on doing it this week," bowler Steven Patterson told BBC Radio Leeds. "We're on course for the record points total since it became two divisions." The County Championship was split in 2000 and the top-flight record is the 257 points that Sussex picked up in 2003, although Somerset collected 266 points when they won Division Two in 2007. Yorkshire are on 241 points with three matches remaining and 31-year-old Patterson, who has taken 43 Championship wickets in 2015, thinks his side's winning run can continue beyond this season. "If you see the team we've had and how many players we've missed then there seems to be no reason why we can't repeat it for the next three or four years," he added. Despite their Championship success, Yorkshire's hopes of winning the One-Day Cup ended on Sunday when they suffered an eight-wicket loss to Gloucestershire in the semi-final at Headingley.
Roddy MacDonald scored a hat-trick as Kyles came from behind to down Fort William 5-3 on the opening day of the Marine Harvest Premiership season. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Unbeaten Yorkshire are aiming to set a new record points total as they close in on winning the County Championship for a second successive season.
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The 26-year-old Guinea international kicked the ball into the crowd and left the pitch in the 34th minute. Milan sent on a substitute, and an announcement warned the game would be stopped if further incidents occurred. The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) has announced an immediate inquiry. A statement from FIGC read: "The Federal Prosecutor's Office has opened an investigation to ascertain the extent of the racist incident that took place at the Stadio del Tricolore in Reggio Emilia during the Milan-Sassuolo match, which saw AC Milan player Kevin Constant the subject of chants from some supporters in the stands." Constant's actions emulate The Ghana international sparked a walk-off during AC Milan's match against Italian lower division club Pro Patria by picking up the ball midway through the first half and kicking it into the crowd before removing his shirt - he was then followed off by both sets of players and officials. While Boateng had plenty of backing, it appears that Milan are less supportive of Constant's decision to leave the field. The club said in a statement: "This was not a decision he should have taken upon himself to make. "Despite his more than understandable reasons and the anger he must have felt, AC Milan would like to remind everyone that the only people responsible for intervening against any manifestations that offend the human dignity, which includes racial discrimination, are the referee in charge of the match and the head of public safety." However, the statement added that racism deserves "zero tolerance". In May, Fifa announced new measures to tackle racism, declaring that teams could be relegated or expelled from competitions for serious incidents of racism as a result of tough new powers.
AC Milan midfielder Kevin Constant walked off the pitch during a pre-season tournament match against fellow Serie A side Sassuolo on Tuesday in response to alleged racist abuse.
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"We are very confident in them and we are excited that we have our 11 players now and we can move on," said Love III. "This was a tough decision and we have another tough decision in two weeks." Love III, who skippered the US when they lost to Europe in 2012, names the final member of his 12-man team on 25 September. This year's Ryder Cup will take place at Hazeltine National in Minnesota from 30 September to 2 October. Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth, Phil Mickelson, Patrick Reed, Jimmy Walker, Brooks Koepka, Brandt Snedeker and Zach Johnson had already qualified automatically for the US team, which has lost the last three contests. Two-time Masters champion and world number seven Bubba Watson is among the players in contention for the final wildcard spot. US wildcard picks: European captain Darren Clarke has named Lee Westwood, Martin Kaymer and rookie Thomas Pieters as his three wildcards.
United States Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III has named Rickie Fowler, Matt Kuchar and JB Holmes as three of four wildcard picks for this year's event.
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The owner of Panda's Palace has submitted plans for the attraction, which it says would "give Skegness the place on the map that it deserves". East Lindsey District Council has welcomed the proposal, saying it would extend the visitor season for the Lincolnshire resort. The creation of the aquarium is expected to create about 25 jobs. Katrina Graham, financial director for owner Teen Spirit Ltd, said: "We hope to give the town another destination attraction that will draw visitors to the resort. "Skegness is a strong seaside location with good existing operations and we are fortunate to have excellent local business people that see the potential to keep reinvesting." Teen Spirit Ltd also owns the town's Tower Cinema. Councillor John Upsall, portfolio holder for property, said: "An aquarium would prove a huge draw for Skegness and the district as a whole, providing an additional all-year-round attraction for both local people and visitors." Teen Spirit Ltd hopes to open the aquarium by April, if planning permission is granted.
A children's play centre on the Skegness seafront could be turned into an aquarium.
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Emma Louise Baum was found dead at her home in Penygroes on Monday. David Nicholas Davies, 25, of Clynnog Fawr, confirmed his name and address at the brief hearing at Caernarfon Magistrates' Court on Friday. He was remanded in custody and will appear at Mold Crown Court on Tuesday 26 July. Meanwhile, watchdog the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said it would be investigating the response by North Wales Police prior to the body of Ms Baum being found. A spokesperson said the force had referred itself to the IPCC. The station is a subsidiary of established France-based network Euronews and broadcasts via satellite, digital terrestrial TV and online. It says it is carried by pay TV providers across Africa, reaching 7.3 million homes in 33 countries. Re-broadcasting deals with stations in Cameroon, Senegal, Madagascar and Mauritius give it additional reach in 3 million TV homes. The "fully-fledged pan-African network" says its mission is to "empower people through independent and reliable news". Currently broadcasting in English and French, it has ambitions to launch in Swahili, Portuguese, Hausa and Wolof and other languages. As on its sister network, Africanews bulletins do not have in-vision presenters and correspondents, relying instead on voiced-over video. Footage - much of it sourced from Euronews and French news agency AFP - is accompanied by an on-screen ticker. Bulletins on launch day, 20 April, featured the burning of poached ivory in Cameroon and the kidnapping of Red Cross workers in Mali. A business news section looked at plans to reopen a Kenyan bank and at unemployment in Zimbabwe. Africanews says it aims to meet a demand for news without "ideological preference" and to reflect diverse points of view. The channel is not "Euronews Africa" and will be editorially independent of the Lyon-based parent network, says CEO Michael Peters. "The demand for unbiased news is unmet. There is a gap to fill. This is why we are launching Africanews to pioneer independent news from the African perspective," Mr Peters says. "We're going to steer people away from the African stereotypes. This is going to be one of the best things ever for African media," says Robert K'Odingo, an Africanews journalist. But distribution via pay TV networks may limit the station's reach. Many African viewers opt for free-to-air terrestrial platforms and most African countries are still to make the switch to digital terrestrial broadcasting. Political pressures could also arise. The Congolese government exercises strong controls over the media and the country is experiencing political turbulence following the controversial re-election of President Denis Sassou-Nguesso for a third term. Mr Peters defends the decision to base the station in Congo, saying it was the only country to meet three key criteria: access to fast internet; easy access to other parts of Africa; and guarantees of editorial independence. Africanews may benefit from a lack of competition. With 24-hour tailored news output dedicated to Africa, the TV could give other international broadcasters operating in Africa a run for their money. Euronews itself has expanded its reach in sub-Saharan Africa in the last year, signing distribution deals with South African pay TV giant DStv Africa and Senegal-based Ouest TV. BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook. The 35-year-old won two silver medals in the canoe double (C2) with partner David Florence at London 2012 and Rio 2016. The London canoeist also became a world champion in 2013 in the C2, along with Florence. Find out how to get into canoeing or kayaking with our inclusive guide. "I'd like to say a massive thanks to everyone involved in helping me live my dream," he said. "It has been a true honour to represent Great Britain at the highest level and I look forward to cheering on British Canoeing and Team GB in the future."
A man has appeared in court charged with murdering a 22-year-old woman in Gwynedd. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Africanews, a 24-hour news TV station targeting viewers across the continent, has launched from studios in Congo-Brazzaville's port city of Pointe-Noire. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two-time British Olympic canoeing medallist Richard Hounslow has retired from the sport.
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The A9 Safety Group, which has released the statistic, has credited average speed cameras with helping to make the stretch of road safer. The network of cameras went live in October last year. But critics of the scheme said longer-term statistics showed a rise in fatal accidents between Inverness and Perth. There have been six fatal crashes - an increase of one on the baseline average of 5.5 fatal accidents - between the two cities between October last year and June this year. Mike Burns, who has campaigned against the cameras, said this figure showed that the system was not the answer to the A9's problems. A9 Safety Group, whose partners include Police Scotland, Highland Council and Road Safety Scotland, has hailed the cut in fatalities over the three busy summer months. Stewart Leggett, the group chairman, said: "These most recent figures continue to demonstrate that driver behaviour on the A9 between Dunblane and Inverness has significantly improved. "Road safety trends remain encouraging and this summer has seen the first time since 2007 where there were no fatal accidents in July, August or September on the A9." He added: "This improvement is taking place despite rising traffic volumes and the busy summer period which saw a number of major events take place, in addition to the seasonal flow of visitors making use of this nationally-important route to support the economy of the Highlands and Islands." Channel 4 will take on the BBC's F1 broadcast rights from next season. "The current financial position of the BBC means some tough and unwanted choices have to be made," said Barbara Slater, the BBC's director of sport. However, BBC Radio 5 live has extended its commentary rights for F1 until the 2021 season. BBC Sport broadcast 10 live races of Briton Lewis Hamilton's world championship-winning season in 2015 with a one-hour build-up to each grand prix. It also offered extensive highlights of the nine other races. But as part of a £150m gap in the corporation's finances from next year, BBC Sport was asked to deliver £35m of savings. "A significant chunk of BBC Sport's savings target will be delivered through the immediate termination of our TV rights agreement for Formula 1," added Slater. "Any decision to have to stop broadcasting a particular sport or sporting event is hugely disappointing and taken reluctantly. "There are no easy solutions; all of the options available would be unpopular with audiences." BBC Sport regained F1 rights from ITV in 2009 but - in another cost-saving move - had been sharing the broadcast rights with Sky Sports since the 2012 season. "These are very challenging times for the BBC and sport is not immune to those financial pressures," added Slater. Read the full Barbara Slater blog here
For the first time in eight years there were no fatal accidents in the months of July, August or September on the A9 between Inverness and Dunblane. [NEXT_CONCEPT] BBC Sport is to "reluctantly" end its Formula 1 television contract three years early as part of savings across the corporation.
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Abertawe Bro Morgannwg wants to encourage the 500,000 people who live in its area to exercise regularly. It is hosting an event on Monday to discuss a new strategy for local organisations. It includes holding walking meetings instead of boardroom meetings. The board said physical activity levels in adults and children in the three counties are "worryingly" low, with one in three people leading an almost sedentary lifestyle. What we should be doing: Sara Hayes, ABMU's director of public heath, said: "Nearly one in five of all deaths in the ABMU area could be prevented if everybody moved enough. "We were made to be active and being active is a natural and healthy thing to do. The problem is that physical activity levels are far too low and they have not increased for over 10 years." She said the new Promise to Move More strategy is aimed at building regular exercise into everyday lives. It includes things like scrapping 'keep off the grass' and 'no ball games' signs to encourage outdoor play, to supporting walking meetings where staff go for a brisk walk for a discussion instead of sitting around a table. The event on Monday takes place at Swansea University Bay Campus at 13:00 BST.
Nearly one in five of all deaths in Swansea, Neath Port Talbot and Bridgend county could be prevented if people were more active, a health board has said.
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He faced the possibility of arrest because of an International Criminal Court (ICC) warrant on charges of genocide. A South African court ordered Mr Bashir to stay in the country while it decided if the warrant should be carried out. But before the court ruled, Mr Bashir flew out of South Africa. BBC Africa Live: Updates through the day Why SA let Bashir escape justice Where can Bashir go now? Sudan's president was in South Africa for an African Union summit and the government was aware that it may have been obliged to arrest him as it is a member of the ICC. The government argued that Mr Bashir was covered by diplomatic immunity while he was at the summit. South Africa's Sunday Times newspaper quotes a government source as saying that at a meeting of security ministers it was agreed that South Africa would protect Mr Bashir "even if it meant flouting court rulings and undermining the constitution". In a statement, the government "categorically denies there was a secret meeting" and adds that it will give the court an explanation of how Mr Bashir came to leave the country. The High Court has given the government until Wednesday to reveal how he was allowed to depart. South Africa's main opposition Democratic Alliance has said that it will raise the issue in parliament on Tuesday, first with the foreign affairs minister and then in a debate. It alleges that Mr Bashir was given assurances that he would be protected "from the highest level", DA foreign affairs spokesman Stevens Mokgalapa told the BBC's Newsday programme.
South Africa's government has denied reports that ministers secretly plotted the departure of Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir last week.
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A car bomb exploded on a busy street in the Karrada district late on Saturday. The mainly Shia area was busy with shoppers late at night because it is the holy month of Ramadan. Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi was met by angry crowds while visiting the scene on Sunday. He later declared three days of national mourning. A second bomb also exploded at about midnight in a predominantly Shia area north of the capital, killing another five people. The bombing in Karrada is the deadliest in Iraq this year and comes a week after Iraqi security forces recaptured the city of Falluja from Islamic State (IS) militants. Police said the dead included at least 15 children and six policemen. At least 12 other people were missing, feared dead. One senior Iraqi official warned that the death toll could rise still further. The US said on Sunday that the latest attack strengthened its resolve to support Iraqi forces in their fight against IS. "We remain united with the Iraqi people and government in our combined efforts to destroy Isil," the White House statement said, using another term for the group. The destruction and death adds up to a clear message from the jihadists of so-called Islamic State. They are saying that even if they are defeated on the battlefield, they can still hit back where it really hurts - killing civilians in the centre of the Iraqi capital, and other capital cities, too. IS have just suffered a serious defeat at the hands of Iraqi forces in Falluja. The town, less than an hour's drive from Baghdad, has been in their hands since early 2014. IS are showing their supporters, and their enemies, that they are not beaten. So many were killed and wounded because the streets are crowded at night at the end of a day's fasting during Ramadan, with thousands in a mood to celebrate. It is only realistic to fear that there will be more attacks like this, as IS comes under more military pressure. In pictures: Baghdad blast Islamic State group: The full story IS, which follows its own extreme version of Sunni Islam, said in an online statement that it had carried out the attack. Iraq's highest Sunni religious body, the Association of Muslim Scholars in Iraq, called the bombing a "bloody crime, regardless of who carried it out or what their motivations were". The blast, which struck close to midnight, came from a refrigerator van packed with explosives, reports said. Many of those killed were children, Associated Press reported. Families gathered on the street on Sunday for news of missing loved ones. The explosion caused a huge fire on the main street. Several buildings, including the popular al-Hadi Centre, were badly damaged. Hussein Ali, a former Iraqi soldier, told AFP news agency that six workers at his family's shop had been killed and their bodies so badly burned that they could not be identified. Mr Abadi visited the scene in the morning, and was met by crowds who shouted "thief" and "dog". Video posted online appeared to show his convoy being pelted with stones. The BBC's Ahmed Maher in Baghdad says many people are angry at the deteriorating security situation and the fact that IS managed to reach the heart of the capital. IS still controls large swathes of territory in the country's north and west, including Mosul, Iraq's second largest city. But the group has been under pressure in Iraq and in neighbouring Syria, where it has been targeted by government forces and US-backed rebels. 9 June 2016: At least 30 people killed in and around Baghdad in two suicide attacks claimed by IS 17 May 2016: Four bomb blasts kill 69 people in Baghdad; three of the targets were Shia areas 11 May 2016: Car bombs in Baghdad kill 93 people, including 64 in market in Shia district of Sadr City 1 May 2016: Two car bombs kill at least 33 people in southern city of Samawa 26 March 2016: Suicide attack targets football match in central city of Iskandariya, killing at least 32 6 March 2016: Fuel tanker blown up at checkpoint near central city of Hilla, killing 47 28 February 2016: Twin suicide bomb attacks hit market in Sadr City, killing 70
At least 125 people have been killed and about 150 injured in an explosion claimed by the so-called Islamic State group in Baghdad, Iraqi police say.
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Paul Wilson, 38, suffered a severe anaphylactic shock in January 2014 after eating a takeaway from the Indian Garden in Easingwold, North Yorkshire. Mohammed Zaman, 52, of Aylesham Court, Huntington, denies manslaughter. Teesside Crown Court heard Mr Zaman was not on the premises when the curry was ordered and did not know what happened. Mr Wilson died at his home in Helperby, North Yorkshire, weeks after another customer with a nut allergy bought a meal from one of Mr Zaman's six restaurants, then had a reaction and required hospital treatment, the court heard. Mr Zaman told the court he employed managers to run his outlets and their duties included ordering ingredients and hiring staff. The restaurateur is accused of cutting corners with ingredients by using cheaper groundnut powder, containing peanuts, rather than almond powder. He said it was not his decision to change the supply order from almond powder to groundnut powder and when he found out, he demanded the supplier take back the stock. Richard Wright QC, prosecuting, asked: "You choose to blame other people, Mr Zaman, rather than taking any responsibility yourself, and that is your approach to the case, isn't it?" The Bangladeshi-born businessman replied: "Yes, that is the reality." When questioned by Alistair Webster QC, Mr Zaman said he was aware the groundnut powder had been switched before Mr Wilson's death and he had told his manager not to use it because it might change the taste of his curries. The father-of-four denied his business was based on making quick savings on ingredients. He claimed he never used groundnut powder since 1981 and believed his businesses served up 3,000 meals on an average week. He said he had no previous reports of customers suffering an allergic reaction. The jury was told Mr Zaman's restaurants won local business honours and acclaim from Trip Advisor, the British Catering Association, the British Curry Awards. Mr Zaman also denies perverting the course of justice and six food safety offences. The trial continues. The Carmathenshire-born actor's roles included 1960s films The Family Way, with Hayley and John Mills, and The Virgin Soldiers, with Lynn Redgrave. But it was in the long-running sitcom Shelley that he made his name. Bennett - whose other television roles included Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Pennies from Heaven - played the title role in the series. It ran from 1979 to 1984 and told the story of an unemployed man living in a London bedsit. He later reprised the role in The Return of Shelley, which ran from 1988 to 1992. He joined EastEnders in 2003 as Jack Dalton, a gangland boss who ended up being killed in an act of revenge. He also featured in episodes of Last of the Summer Wine and in the Dennis Potter mini-series Karaoke and Cold Lazarus. Bennett appeared as Peter Baxter in The Bill for five years. His last known role was as Reggie Conway in The Last Detective in 2007. He had one daughter, Emma, with former wife Cathy McGowan and was godfather to Crispian Mills, son of Hayley and lead singer of rock band Kula Shaker. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected].
A restaurant owner accused of killing a customer who died from an allergic reaction to a curry "was not to blame" for his death, a court has heard. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Actor Hywel Bennett, known for his roles in Shelley and EastEnders, has died aged 73, his agent has confirmed.
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The 20-year-old was due to compete in the 400m and 4x400m relay, alongside identical twin Laviai. She has suffered a "stress response" - the stage before a stress fracture - on a fibula and has withdrawn as a precautionary measure. Eilish McColgan has pulled out of the 1500m after suffering from illness but will still race in the 3,000m. The championships start on Friday and run through to Sunday. Men: 60m: Richard Kilty, Andrew Robertson, Theo Etienne; 800m: Guy Learmonth, Kyle Langford; 1,500m: Tom Lancashire; 3,000m: Nick Goolab; 60m hurdles: Andrew Pozzi, David King, David Omoregie; High jump: Robbie Grabarz, Chris Kandu, Allan Smith; Long jump: Dan Bramble; Combined events: Ashley Bryant, Liam Ramsey. Women: 60m: Asha Phillip; 400m: Eilidh Doyle, Laviai Nielsen; 800m: Shelayna Oskan-Clarke; 1500m: Laura Muir, Sarah McDonald; 3,000m: Laura Muir, Eilish McColgan, Steph Twell; High jump: Morgan Lake; Long jump: Lorraine Ugen, Jazmin Sawyers; Shot put: Rachel Wallader; 4x400m: Eilidh Doyle, Laviai Nielsen, Philippa Lowe, Mary Iheke. The monk, named as Venerable Jung-won, 64, staged the protest on Saturday at a rally against President Park Geun-hye. He died on Monday night at a hospital in Seoul due to multiple organ failures caused by his burns. Activists have been campaigning for justice for the women, referred to as "comfort women", for decades. In 2015, Ms Park reached a deal with Japan which saw it promise to pay into a fund for South Korean women who were forced to work in Japanese military brothels during World War Two. As part of the deal, the two countries agreed that the compensation and an apology would "finally and irreversibly" resolve the matter. But critics have said the deal does not go far enough in holding Japan responsible for wartime abuses, and does not directly compensate the women. Venerable Jung-won had left a suicide note in which he called Ms Park a "traitor". The social justice committee of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism said he had "sacrificed his life to convey people's sentiment including... the demand for President Park Geun-Hye to resign". "We hope that no lives will be lost like this and the whole country will be stabilised soon," said the statement, according to AFP. Tensions between the two countries increased last Friday after Tokyo withdrew its ambassador to South Korea in a row over a statue representing sex slaves. Japan said the 1.5m-tall (5ft) bronze statue depicting a young, barefoot woman sitting in a chair, was a violation of the 2015 agreement. On Sunday, Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe demanded the removal of the statue from outside Japan's consulate in the South Korean city of Busan. It is one of several which have been put up around South Korea by activists. "The South Korean side should show its sincerity,'' he said on Japanese TV. He said the 2015 agreement should be implemented as a "matter of credibility". At the time of the deal, 46 former "comfort women" were still alive in South Korea. The issue has been one of several raised at the regular rallies against Ms Park in Seoul in recent months. Ms Park has been embroiled in a scandal involving a close friend who has been charged with corruption. She has been suspended from duties since December, when parliament voted to impeach her.
Great Britain's Lina Nielsen will miss the European Indoor Championships in Belgrade with a leg injury. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Buddhist monk in South Korea has died after setting himself on fire in protest over a 2015 deal struck with Japan on wartime sex slaves.
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Ex-officer Curtis Reeves, 71, opened fire after asking a man sitting directly in front of him to stop texting several times, a Pasco County Sheriff spokesman said. Chad Oulson, 43, died in hospital. The two men, accompanied by their wives, had been watching the previews for a matinee screening in Wesley Chapel, north of Tampa, on Monday. The victim had explained that he was texting his three-year-old daughter, witness Charles Cummings told FOX 13 television. Mr Reeves has been charged with second-degree murder. The two couples had been waiting to watch the new war film Lone Survivor at the Cobb Grove 16 cinema in Wesley Chapel when the row broke out. Mr Reeves apparently stormed out of the auditorium to get a manager, but returned without one. "Three seconds, four seconds later, the argument starts again," Mr Cummings said. "Their voices start going up; there seems to be almost a confrontation. Somebody throws popcorn, I'm not sure who threw the popcorn, and, bang, he was shot." Mr Oulson's wife, Nicole, was wounded as she had placed her hand over her husband just as he was shot, sheriff's spokesman Doug Tobin said. A nurse in the audience tried performing emergency resuscitation on the victim while an off-duty sheriff's deputy detained the gunman, according to reports. "The male victim is deceased. The female victim was injured with non-life-threatening injuries," Mr Tobin said. Tampa Police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said Mr Reeves was a captain when he retired from the department in 1993, according to the Associated Press. After he retired, he was on the board of a neighbouring county's Crime Stoppers organisation. The cinema, part of the Cobb Theatres chain, was reportedly evacuated and closed. ''It's crazy. I never thought something like this would happen at our theatre," ABC News quoted cinema employee Leny Vega as saying. Lone Survivor, based on a New York Times best-seller, stars Mark Wahlberg and tells the story of four navy Seals on an ill-fated covert mission against the Taliban in Afghanistan. The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was jailed for 19 years at Hull Crown Court on Monday. He raped his granddaughter and sexually abused other children in his care over a nine-year period while he was a Hull City Council-registered foster carer. His neighbour recorded sounds through their shared wall. The neighbour, who also cannot be identified for legal reasons, said she and her family became suspicious after her husband "saw the man acting sexually inappropriately" with one of the children in the back garden. She said they also heard screams and other "odd" sounds from next door, which prompted them to set up a microphone. "We heard a lot of smacking, proper skin on skin slaps, and it happened about 10 times." One night in September 2010 the family were woken up by "screams, bangs and crashes", she said. "It was so loud we all came running downstairs... and it was such a commotion. "The woman was shouting 'you're evil' and the man saying 'but I was only laid with the [child]'. "The argument carried on outside with lots of abuse and swearing... we couldn't believe it and we just thought of the children." She submitted the recording to police, which subsequently led to the children being removed from his care and him being de-registered as a foster carer in 2012. The neighbour said the case had had a devastating impact on their lives. "It was horrendous and it just put a really big strain on our family. It was awful. "It's something that's been with me and my family for seven years and it's something that's never left me. "I've tried to move on with things but it's always at the back of my mind." She said she had been left "anxious and depressed", but was now relieved the former foster carer had "finally" been sentenced for his crimes.
A retired police officer shot dead a fellow cinemagoer in Florida in an argument over texting, police say. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A neighbour who reported a foster carer for child abuse was left "devastated" by what she heard in secret recordings she made that led to his prosecution.
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Bentancur, 19, was in Turin on Monday to have a medical before joining the Serie A leaders. The Uruguay Under-20 international is a product of Argentine club Boca Juniors' youth team. Juventus negotiated a purchase option on Bentancur when striker Carlos Tevez moved back to Boca Juniors from the Turin club in June 2015. Juve are six points clear at the top of the table with eight games remaining as they chase a sixth successive Serie A title. Massimiliano Allegri's side are also in the quarter-finals of the Champions League where they face Barcelona over two legs on 11 and 19 April. Media playback is not supported on this device Downie, 17, was completing a somersault on the floor when she landed awkwardly. She was assessed by medical staff and returned to compete on the vault. Britain finished fourth in qualifying with a total of 174.064, behind Russia, China and defending champions USA, with the top eight teams progressing to Tuesday's team final. Downie, meanwhile, finished 24th in the all-around qualification meaning she is into the final. "I crunched my neck," Downie said. "It sounds pretty gross but I just felt dizzy before my last tumble. "They put me in a wheelchair and I was like, 'I don't need a wheelchair.' "I was better than I thought so I came back out and vaulted." The pipe burst just after 12:30 GMT on Sunday in Stoke Newington High Street. Emergency services are at the scene. More than 150 properties have been affected as knee-high water flooded the Northwold Road junction. This is the third burst water pipe to cause flooding problems in the capital in a week. Eyewitnesses said the water main had been leaking on to Stoke Newington High Street since Monday. Gonen Ozer, who manages two businesses on Stoke Newington High Street told the BBC he was considering legal action against Thames Water due to loss of business. "To leave a burst water pipe unattended for over a week is extremely unprofessional and careless." Thames Water said the flooding was caused when a 30-inch water pipe burst. Thames Water director Bob Collington said: "It has been an extremely difficult week, and I do understand just how devastating it must be for those customers who have suffered flooding so close to Christmas. "We are doing everything we can to help them and will make sure they are not left out of pocket for what has happened." Crews are attempting to divert water away from homes and businesses. The Metropolitan Police has closed roads in the area and advised pedestrians and motorists seek alternative routes. The burst follows a severe flood causing millions of pounds of damage in Islington last week. Separately, another burst water main led to flooding in Blackheath on Saturday. Six fire engines, two fire rescue units and over 40 firefighters dealt with a 12-inch burst water main on Lee High Road. Thames Water said Saturday's flood in Blackheath was caused by a contractor. Between them, the two firms employ more than 20,000 staff worldwide with combined annual sales of £15bn (£10bn). Avago, based in both the US and Singapore, said the deal was a "landmark" transaction. It is using a combination of cash and shares to pay for Broadcom. "The combination of Avago and Broadcom creates a global diversified leader in wired and wireless communication semiconductors," said Hock Tan, Avago's chief executive. Broadcom makes semiconductors for set-top boxes, mobile phones and network equipment, and its chips are used in smartphones made by Apple and Samsung. Avago has been expanding rapidly. Broadcom is the sixth company to be bought by Avago since the start of 2013.
Italian champions Juventus are close to signing teenage midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur from Boca Juniors. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Ellie Downie recovered from hurting her neck in a bad fall to help Great Britain reach the women's team gymnastics final at the Rio Olympics. [NEXT_CONCEPT] About 350 people were forced to evacuate their homes after a burst water main left a busy north London street submerged. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Avago Technologies, one of the world's biggest manufacturers of semiconductors, is buying its California-based rival Broadcom for $37bn (£24bn).
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Angus McNeil said the Northern Lighthouse Board (NBL) was open to the idea of working with the mobile phone service providers. He said it was possible equipment needed to provide the phone services could be fitted to lighthouses. The SNP MP for the Western Isles hopes to progress the idea further. Mr MacNeil contacted NLB following a query from phone company EE on the use of lighthouse sites which could allow them to improve coverage. He said: "NLB have said that they are committed to developing the Scottish economy and are therefore open to discussions with mobile providers on where opportunities might lie. "I would like to thank NLB for their prompt, sensible response and their ability to see the bigger picture." Mr MacNeil added: "I have already received confirmation from Vodafone that 4G will be delivered to the islands within the next two years but the sooner all companies have infrastructure in place to do this, the better for the economy of the islands. "I look forward to further discussions with operators and NLB on how we can take this forward."
Lighthouses could help improve mobile phone coverage in the Western Isles and boost the introduction of new 4G services to the isles, an MP has said.
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Westminster council said in central London supercars were often illegally parked in bus lanes, on double yellow lines and in residents' parking bays. But the authority is unable to recoup the money as it does not have the power to trace overseas vehicles. The council wants the law changed to give it access to overseas driver and vehicle registration information. According to the authority, foreign-owned cars and motorbikes owe almost £4m in unpaid fines handed out over the past three years, with more than 80% of overseas drivers given tickets refusing to pay for them. Revealing several "high-profile" offenders, the council said the owner of a £300,000 Rolls Royce Phantom, with the number plate 3HVB, had accumulated 18 tickets and more than £2,000 in fines. And it said the owner of a £1.2m Bugatti Veyron L'Edition Centenaire, with the number plate 444, had an outstanding ticket for parking outside a main entrance to Selfridges department store in Oxford Street in March. Kieran Fitsall, of Westminster City Council, said: "The best thing that we can ask for is for the government to do something about this. "It's not just Westminster that has a problem, it's right the way across the UK. We can't trace these vehicles and they are causing a problem." Figures released in the summer by police chiefs suggested a year-on-year rise in hate crimes. Ms Brown said the increase in reporting crime did not "necessarily" mean more crime was being committed. Labour AM Rhianon Passmore called the remarks "insensitive" and claimed UKIP did not take the offences seriously. In a debate in the Senedd on Tuesday Ms Brown, who represents North Wales, said any increase in reported crimes was "not necessarily an indication that more of those crimes are actually being committed". She added: "Increases in reported crime are therefore more a testament to the effectiveness of the publicity machine surrounding hate crime than evidence that our society is become more intolerant." Ms Passmore, who represents Islwyn, said: "The evidence clearly shows that very many people do not report hate crimes and these insensitive and ill-chosen remarks from UKIP will do nothing to address this, nor the incidents of intolerance that victims face on a daily basis. "UKIP's attempts to dismiss this shows that they do not take these offences seriously." In July then-Prime Minister David Cameron described crimes committed in the wake of June's EU referendum "despicable". Hate crimes are offences where a victim is targeted because of criteria including their race, religion, sexual orientation or disability. Berks, Bucks and Oxon Wildlife Trust hopes to secure £2m of Heritage Lottery Funding for the Reconnect project. It will focus on the river from Lechlade-on-Thames, Gloucestershire, to Sandford-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, and will also look at leisure activities, including walking and fishing. The charity will be told in October whether its bid has been successful. Wendy Tobitt, of Bucks, Berks and Oxon Wildlife, described the river as a "fantastic natural resource". She said the majority of the work would involve workshops and guided walks to help "reconnect people with the Thames". "It has a vast array of wildlife - otters, salmon, kingfishers, water voles - and we want to enable more people to see these lovely creatures," she said. "Guided trails would give people a better idea of what is on offer, but sometimes hidden." The work will also look at art and poetry, including poet Edward Thomas who wrote about the Thames and William Morris of the arts and craft movement who lived at Kelmscott Manor beside the river, as well as the area's significance during the Industrial Revolution. "The Thames was a main transport artery for many towns - places like Lechlade grew up because of the wool trade," Ms Tobitt said. Other groups and firms involved with the project include Thames Water, Environment Agency, Cotswold Conservation Board, as well as local authorities and history groups.
Drivers of foreign-owned supercars are being blamed for helping rack up almost £4m in unpaid parking fines in London. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Labour has called for UKIP AM Michelle Brown to clarify comments she made on Tuesday suggesting there was a hate crime "publicity machine". [NEXT_CONCEPT] Conservationists have launched a scheme to highlight the wildlife and history of the upper River Thames.
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There was also a small drop in turnover, from £11.7m to £11.5m. The figure represents a large change in fortunes for the county, who posted a £327,000 profit for 2011. Edgbaston's 2012 summer schedule was severely affected by rain - three days of the Test between England and West Indies and the one-day international against Australia were washed out. The county believe that last summer's dreadful weather and the difference in popularity of England's international opponents were the major reasons for the drop from the previous year. "The relative attractiveness of staging the Test Match against India in 2011, compared with the West Indies in 2012, meant that a reduction in revenue and profits was always expected and budgeted for," said Craig Flindall, Warwickshire's financial director. "The exceptionally bad weather did nothing to improve this situation. "However, the club mitigated the impact of the weather by reducing costs where possible and taking out insurance to cover the catering revenue for the ODI and international T20 matches." Mother-of-two Emma Taylor was confronted by Frank Simpson, 36, and Jordan Hartley, 27, at Sainsbury's car park in Halifax on 1 December. Bradford Crown Court heard she was threatened with a black BB gun before they grabbed the keys to her VW car with her baby son in the back. The pair were each jailed for 12 years. During the "terrifying" incident on Wade Street, the court heard the car was accidently locked with the infant inside. Simpson, of Carr House Road, Halifax, and Hartley, of Denbrook Close, Bradford, fled after the mother began to shout and scream. In a statement read out in court, Ms Taylor said: "I was shouting 'I've got a baby!' and still he threatened me with the gun. "At one point I said 'Let me get my baby out', I was so desperate. "It seemed to go on for a long time and I did wonder why he didn't shoot me. "I do think what would have happened if they drove off with [the baby] in the car. It doesn't bear thinking about." The pair fled in a stolen Ford Fiesta, which they had carjacked from a woman nine hours earlier. Sentencing them, Judge Neil Davey QC said: "I have no doubt that at least one of you, being a father, will understand just how terrifying it must have been for her to witness her baby being put in such danger by a man brandishing a gun." The court heard the defendants were fuelled by drugs and alcohol. They armed themselves with a fake gun and targeted lone women. Both admitted two robbery offences and possessing an imitation firearm.
Reigning county champions Warwickshire have announced operating losses of £668,000 for 2012. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two robbers who pointed an imitation handgun at a mother while attempting to steal a car with her nine-month-old baby in the back have been jailed.
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Terry, 30, who is also Chelsea's captain, denies aiming a racist slur at the QPR player in a game on 23 October. The Metropolitan Police confirmed that a "30-year-old man was interviewed under caution on Friday 25 November. He was not arrested." The Football Association is also looking into the incident. Some members of the public claimed video replays from the match at Loftus Road showed Terry using racist language, while the FA said it had received a complaint. Ferdinand has previously given a statement to the FA, saying he has "very strong" feelings on the matter, but will not elaborate until the FA inquiry has been concluded. The FA's investigation into the allegation cannot be completed until the outcome of the police investigation. In a statement following the game at Loftus Road, Terry described the incident as a "misunderstanding" and claimed that his accusers "have leapt to the wrong conclusions about the context of what I was seen to be saying". He added: "I would never say such a thing - and I'm saddened that people would think so."
England football captain John Terry has been questioned in relation to allegations that he racially abused Anton Ferdinand, the BBC understands.
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The party said the event was not needed following a decision to hold the main UK conference in Llandudno next spring. UKIP leader Nigel Farage is still due to visit Swansea on 23 October, as part of his Say No to EU tour. A ticket website said the conference was cancelled due to a lack of sales, but a UKIP official said the message was incorrect and caused by an administrative error.
UKIP has cancelled its Welsh autumn conference in Swansea in a fortnight.
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The 19-year-old, from Burntwood in Staffordshire, raised more than £3.2m ($5.36m) for charity after news of his plight spread on social media. In a post announcing Stephen's death, Jane Sutton said he was a "courageous, selfless, inspirational son". Stephen was diagnosed with terminal cancer aged 15. Rather than dwell on his misfortune, the teenager drew up a "bucket list" of things he wanted to achieve before he died. This led to him completing a skydive and playing drums in front of 90,000 people before the Uefa Champions League final at Wembley last May, among various achievements. Ms Sutton said in her statement: "My heart is bursting with pride but breaking with pain for my courageous, selfless, inspirational son. "The ongoing support and outpouring of love for Stephen will help greatly at this difficult time, in the same way as it helped Stephen throughout his journey. "We all know he will never be forgotten, his spirit will live on, in all that he achieved and shared with so many." The Facebook post announcing Stephen's death was shared more than 120,000 times within an hour of its publication. Donations to his online fundraising page, set up in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust, began to climb once again as the news of the teenager's death spread. Justgiving, which hosts Stephen's online fundraising page, said its engineers had to "work quickly" to boost server capacity after a sharp increase in visitors to the site. It said the campaign total had risen by about £60,000 in just over two hours. Stephen was readmitted to hospital on Sunday after developing breathing difficulties caused by the regrowth of tumours. He had initially set out to raise just £10,000 ($16,800) for charity, but his fundraising campaign attracted huge attention last month after he posted a selfie online. The image went viral and attracted the support of celebrities including Jason Manford, who championed Stephen's charity efforts. Paying tribute, the comedian said Stephen "was the most inspiring person I've ever met and touched more lives than he will ever know". "He was an incredibly positive young man and a credit to his family, to Burntwood and to humanity itself. "The reason we took to him so passionately was because he was better than us, he did something that none of us could even imagine doing. "In his darkest hour he selflessly dedicated his final moments to raising millions of pounds for teenagers with cancer." As well as for his fundraising, Stephen became well known for his bucket list. Along with skydiving and playing drums to a huge crowd, the list also included hugging an elephant and getting a tattoo. Stephen, who was diagnosed with metastatic bowel cancer aged 15, was visited earlier this month at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital by Prime Minister David Cameron, who praised his "incredible" efforts to help others. Mr Cameron said: "I can hardly think of anyone I've met with such a zest for life, and such a belief that you can get things done, and who wanted to live every minute. "He was absolutely inspiring." Labour leader Ed Miliband also paid tribute and wrote: "Tragic news that Stephen Sutton has passed away. His bravery & determination to live life to the full was an inspiration to us all." Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg wrote: "Very sad to hear about the death of Stephen Sutton. Such a brave, selfless and inspirational young man." A number of celebrities and public figures have also paid tribute to Stephen. Comedian Ricky Gervais tweeted: "RIP Stephen Sutton. A true hero & inspiration to us all." TV presenter Clare Balding tweeted: "Desperately sad to hear that Stephen Sutton has died. I feel privileged to have met him and heard him speak." The Teenage Cancer Trust, to which Stephen made the largest ever single donation in its history, said: "We are humbled and hugely grateful for what Stephen achieved and continues to achieve for us." Deborah Alsina, chief executive of Bowel Cancer UK, said Stephen had "undoubtedly created greater awareness... that bowel cancer can affect younger people too and for this we owe him such gratitude". Staff at his former school, Chase Terrace Technology College in Burntwood, paid tribute to the "model student". Chair of governors Di Evans said he "made such a difference to people's lives - not just in Burntwood, not just in Birmingham, or England but worldwide". "He never ever stopped smiling despite that awful illness," she said. "He never, ever gave up and was fighting to the very end."
Teenage cancer fundraiser Stephen Sutton has died peacefully in his sleep, his mother said on his Facebook page.
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A television was also taken in the burglary in Cuxton Road, Strood, between 0630 and 1830 GMT on Tuesday. Officers said the owner had been temporarily living in the caravan, which is next to his house. Det Sgt Adam Marshall urged anyone who had the rifles to hand them into police, saying they were "extremely dangerous" if not handled correctly.
Two air rifles have been stolen from a caravan in Kent, leading police to issue an appeal to the offenders.
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The Aberdeenshire-based company announced it had raised £19m in the fourth round of its Equity for Punks crowdfunding scheme. BrewDog launched the round a year ago in order to expand its business. It has yet to say whether the shortfall will have an impact on its growth plans, which include expanding its brewery in Ellon and opening new bars. The fourth round closed on Wednesday but BrewDog said it would still accept paper applications until 29 April. The Ellon-based company has raised more than £26m since launching its first crowdfunding round in 2009. On its website, BrewDog describes Equity for Punks IV scheme as "the biggest equity crowdfunding campaign ever seen". Crowdfunding involves companies raising small amounts of money from a large number of people, typically via the internet. The craft brewer is set to launch a further round of crowdfunding, to help fund a major expansion in the US. It plans to replicate the success of its Equity for Punks scheme in the UK by turning to US residents for backing. Cash raised from the American scheme, to be launched next month, will in part be used to open a new US brewery in Ohio. BrewDog has estimated the initial costs of establishing the base and a network of BrewDog "brewpubs" across the country at about $25m (£17.3m). In a filing with US regulators, the firm said it planned to raise $314m, valuing it at nearly $2.6bn. Virtu is one of the biggest so-called high-frequency trading firms that rely on algorithms to execute trades. The practice came under fire after a "flash crash" in 2010. The crash wiped 700 points off the Dow Jones index in a matter of minutes, and was attributed to a cascade of sales by computer trading programs. High frequency trading is where traders create complicated algorithms programmed into computers to buy and sell stocks in milliseconds, faster than any human. It has grown in popularity in recent years, but has also come under scrutiny for supposed risks. Journalist Michael Lewis wrote a book on firms that engage in high frequency trading, Flash Boys, which was published in 2014. The book, which questioned whether or not flash traders rigged markets in their favour, received wide attention, and several US Congressional hearings were called to look into regulations regarding flash trading. In the wake of the negative press, Virtu was forced to delay its public share offering in March 2014. Founded by former New York Mercantile Exchange head Vincent Viola, Virtu would be the first high-speed trading firm to become a publicly-listed company. RCN head Peter Carter said he did not want relatives performing tasks nurses were employed to carry out, but that there were "real benefits" for patients when family members helped with care. The Department of Health said family help needed to be alongside NHS care. But patients' groups warned such a move could be "the tip of the iceberg". Dr Carter, the RCN's general secretary, said the college was not suggesting families be compelled to carry out any tasks. "We know that there are real benefits for patients where relatives can get involved in care, if that is what both the patient and family want," he said. "We know from areas such as children's care that having familiar people involved at mealtimes for example can make hospital stays in particular less stressful for all concerned. "What we would like to see is flexibility to allow relatives to help make patients comfortable, such as extending visiting times." Department of Health chief nursing officer Christine Beasley praised the "amazing work" work of carers and relatives and welcomed their help but added: "This must be in addition to NHS care, not instead of it. "Nurses should spend their time caring for patients and it is important to look at the way wards are run to help ensure this happens." "I expect all hospitals to ensure that they are providing safe, high quality nursing care because this must be at the heart of the NHS." But Patients Association chief executive Katherine Murphy said patient care - including helping with feeding and taking patients to the toilet - should be carried out by nurses. "It is just the tip of the iceberg," she said. "Where will we draw the line?" She added that some patients would not have families nearby or with the time to help out. If there were not enough nurses to provide the care, then more nurses needed to be employed, she said. Earlier this week, Dr Carter said the NHS had become too reliant on healthcare assistants who often end up doing more than the basic tasks they were employed to do. He recommended better training and regulation of health care assistants.
Craft brewer and bar operator BrewDog has fallen well short of a £25m target it set for its latest funding round. [NEXT_CONCEPT] US high-speed trading firm Virtu has renewed efforts to make its stock market debut, after it was forced to delay plans due to a controversial book. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Hospital visiting times should be extended so patients' relatives can become more involved in their care, the Royal College of Nursing has said.
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Pixar studio president Jim Morris made the revelation in an interview to Spanish fan site Disney Latino, in which he talked about the future direction of the animated franchise. "It will be a love story," he said. "It will be a romantic comedy. "It will not put much focus on the interaction between the characters and children." John Lasseter, who directed Toy Story and Toy Story 2, is returning to direct the new film, which is due for release on 16 June, 2017. The new story was created by the original Toy Story writing team of Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter and Lee Unkrich. Morris said that, although Toy Story 4 would pick up from the events at the end of the last film, it wouldn't be a continuation. "The third film ended in a beautiful way and completed a trilogy," he told Disney Latino blog. "This movie isn't part of the trilogy. It's a separate story and I don't know if will be continued." The news of a fourth Toy Story film didn't go down well with fans when it was announced in November. Many told Newsbeat that it should have ended with the third film. But Morris denied they were reviving the franchise just to make money. "The decision to make a second or third [film] entirely depends on how passionate the director of the project is. "Fortunately, our films are successful and we don't have to keep having to make sequels to make money." 2010's Toy Story 3 was the highest-grossing animated film of all time, before Frozen knocked it off the top spot last year. The third instalment of the series also won two Oscars - for best animated feature and best original song. Some of its iconic characters were already well-known toys, such as the Etch-A-Sketch and Mr Potato Head, while others like Woody and Buzz Lightyear became toys after being invented for the film. Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube Pant Du, near Penygroes, Gwynedd, produces 2,500 bottles of wine a year and is now also producing its own energy. From 44 solar panels, it is able to power everything on site, including an electric car. Owner Richard Wyn Huws said energy was still produced on rainy days. "You get a little bit of electricity because it's daylight," he said. "But, obviously, when it's really hot and great sunshine, there's nothing better than seeing my meter ticking away full speed, as they say, and creating cash for us." Mr Huws said the solar panels were a "win-win-win" for him as he was able to create free electricity to power machinery on site, as well as selling surplus energy to the national grid. He bought Pant Du, a farm dating back to the 17th Century, with his wife Iola in 2003. They decided to create a vineyard after visiting New Zealand and seeing how successful their wine industry was. They also planted 18 acres of orchards to produce cider.
Toy Story 4 will be a romcom, with less of a focus on the relationship between the characters and children. [NEXT_CONCEPT] It might be in an area not known for long sunny days but a vineyard in north Wales has shown it can grow grapes and generate electricity from solar panels.
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Bangladesh, the only other team still in contention, lost to Sri Lanka by 42 runs in their rain-affected final game of the World Cup Qualifier in Colombo. India, who beat Pakistan, and South Africa, who overcame Ireland, had already made sure of qualification. Those top four teams from the Super Six phase will join hosts England, plus Australia, New Zealand and West Indies. The leading four sides had booked their places by finishing in the top four of the ICC Women's Championship, which was contested between 2014 and 2016. It is the first time since 1993 that England have hosted the tournament, which starts on 24 June and will be played in a round-robin format with the group games at Bristol, Derby, Leicester and Taunton, before Lord's hosts the final on 23 July. The Qualifier concludes in Colombo on Tuesday with the top two sides, India and South Africa, meeting in the final - although this does not affect qualification.
Pakistan and Sri Lanka have clinched the two remaining places for this summer's ICC Women's World Cup.
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They had been set to walk out in a row over pay with Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board (ABMU). Unison said the suspended strike would "allow for consideration of the board's latest offer." The health board has been asked to comment. About 80 staff staged a 24-hour walk-out on 25 January. Another strike due to take place on 1 February was halted. Unison have said affected members wanted "pay parity" with colleagues doing the same job in other hospitals in Wales.
Staff in the sterilisation and disinfection units at some south Wales hospitals have suspended strike action due to go ahead on Wednesday.
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Twenty-seven-year-old Tipuric, who weighs 15st 9lb, would give away around three stones in weight if he is picked opposite Willem Alberts. "Even when I was younger, it would be playing against everyone much bigger than you," he told BBC Wales Sport. "It's exactly the same now even at this stage of my life." Wales and South Africa are both due to announce their teams on Thursday, 24 November. Alberts wore the open-side jersey for the Springboks in their defeat by Italy, but faces a fitness test on a neck injury. Fellow heavyweight Pieter-Steph du Toit filled the position against England, while Tipuric wore number seven for Wales against Australia and Argentina earlier in the month. "If you're the smallest, people think they'll run over you for fun and it is nice to put in a good tackle and get them down. It's something you enjoy as a back-rower," said the Ospreys player. Tipuric is renowned for being one of the fastest forwards in the game, but admits he had trouble convincing people of his physical attributes when he was younger. He has made 45 Wales appearances and another for the British and Irish Lions - against Australia in 2013 - while largely being understudy Sam Warburton, the captain of both teams. "To be honest I've always been smaller than everyone, growing up as a kid," he said. "When I was younger at the Ospreys, there was a bit of my career when they said 'he's a bit too slow and a bit too small' but I've had a lot of ups and downs through my career. It's nothing abnormal to anyone else." Style change Tipuric says it could suit his style if Wales switch to a wider, more fluid game after years of more direct tactics under coach Warren Gatland, dubbed 'Warrenball'. "If you're in a team like that and the ball's going a bit wider, it's something I enjoy," he added. "We try to spread the ball a bit with the Ospreys and there's a bit more, how shall I say, enjoyment for me. "We are getting there [with Wales]. It's a bit tough because we're not as fluid as we would like, everybody knows that. But we will get there, hopefully on Saturday." Faletau option Tipuric will be fighting for a back-row place in the squad after Taulupe Faletau's return to action for Bath last Friday against Bristol following a knee injury. Skipper Warburton and Dan Lydiate are the other regulars in the back-row selection battle, while Ross Moriarty and James King have also made an impression this autumn. "He's world-class, and to have him back starting or involved would be massive," said Tipuric. "I think it raises everyone in the team when you see world-class players around you, you've got to be up to that standard."
Wales flanker Justin Tipuric says it will be nothing new for him if he faces a much bigger South African opponent in Saturday's final Autumn Test.
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Glasgow City Council has appointed CH2M Hill to design the bridge, with construction work planned for 2019. A study will look at the feasibility for a crossing from Water Row in Govan to either Glasgow Harbour East or a location beside the Riverside Museum. It is expected to cost about £10m and would be funded through the £1.13bn Glasgow region City Deal. The bridge would open to ensure that vessels such as the Waverley were still be able to berth up-stream. It is hoped the bridge will help the regeneration of Govan by creating a link to Glasgow University to the north, the QEUH campus to the west and Pacific Quay to the east. Council leader Frank McAveety said: "Govan and Partick shared a connection for centuries, and with so much regeneration happening in both communities, the time has come for this bridge to further strengthen their development." For at least 2,000 years, the area had importance as a location where it was once possible to ford the Clyde. The social and economic connection was later maintained through cross-river ferries. The historic Govan ferry was closed to passengers in the mid-1960s. CH2M Hill (formerly Halcrow) has previously delivered a number of bridges across the River Clyde, including the Clyde Arc, the Dalmarnock Smart Bridge and the Tradeston Bridge.
A new pedestrian and cycle bridge, which would cross the Clyde to connect Govan and Partick, is being planned.
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A thin flexible telescope, called an endobronchial ultrasound, is inserted through the patient's mouth and provides camera pictures and ultrasound images. Samples can also be taken which can lead to faster diagnosis. Dr Terence McManus uses the device in the South West Acute Hospital. The 30-minute procedure is carried out under local anaesthetic and patients can normally return home the same day. Dr McManus, a respiratory consultant, said: "It's a new technique that allows us to biopsy and diagnose conditions at an earlier stage. "It can, in some cases, avoid the need for more invasive surgery techniques. "Using this technique we can diagnose conditions such as cancer, inflammatory conditions, and sometimes infections as well." He said it allowed doctors to "establish a diagnosis and then determine what is the most appropriate treatment for a patient as quickly as possible". Approximately 900 people in Northern Ireland are diagnosed with lung cancer each year. It is the second most common cancer among men and the third most common among women. Stephen Hogan from Florencecourt, County Fermanagh, has lung disease and has undergone the procedure. He described it as very simple and added it had no unpleasant side effects. "The big difference for me is knowing where I'm at with the diagnosis and the referral on to the oncologist and then I know what my treatment options are. So, it actually gives you a sense of relief and it saves a lot of time. "I'm dependent on some degree of oxygen so travelling between A and B is a bit of an issue and we're very lucky to have this brand new facility, so it's brilliant." The South West Acute Hospital, which opened its doors six months ago, is the first in Northern Ireland to offer this service. Joe Lusby, deputy chief executive of the Western Health Trust, said it demonstrated how the latest technology is benefiting patients in the new state-of-the-art hospital. "Anything that provides a faster and more accurate diagnosis of lung disease is bound to be good for the patient," he said. "This hospital is built for the next 60 years at least so what we were doing is not just transferring services across from the former Erne Hospital. "We were determined to add services that were appropriate to provide locally so that people don't have to travel great distances to access these services." About 90% of lung cancer cases are caused by smoking cigarettes and Dr McManus has also seen patients getting the disease at a younger age. He said: "It can affect any age. Smoking is certainly the biggest risk factor so we would always emphasise the importance of stopping smoking as soon as possible, it's never too late to stop smoking."
A new technique for detecting lung cancer without the need for surgery is helping patients in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.
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Rodgers' side knocked the Norwegians out of Champions League qualifying this season courtesy of a 1-0 away victory. "You only need to look at Rosenborg's result last night away to Ajax [in Europa League qualifying]," he said. "It really demonstrated the level of our performance when we played out there - Ajax were in the Europa League final last year." Having drawn 0-0 with Rosenborg in Glasgow, setting up a tricky trip to Norway, Celtic produced a mature second-leg performance to run out winners courtesy of James Forrest's strike. 'It's about continual development' That set up a play-off meeting with Astana and Celtic's 5-0 win on Wednesday all but booked their group stage berth ahead of Tuesday's return leg in Kazakhstan. Last term the Scottish champions drew three and lost three of their Champions League group stage matches, after being drawn with Barcelona, Manchester City and Borussia Moenchengladbach. And Rodgers is happy that his charges are making significant strides as they stand on the brink of another campaign in Europe's elite competition. "We still have a way to go but what's important for me as the manager, and the coaches, is that we're seeing improvement," he added. "If you think of our last games away from home in the Champions League, we've performed to a really high level. "It's about continual development, it's about having that hunger and continuous drive to succeed and be better, and this group of players has that. I would expect us to go on this year and continue to improve. "But if you're saying can we match Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, then it's very tough. The financial difference now is absolutely huge. "We'll always be competitive, but I'm also a realist. You're not going to be sat there writing about us winning the Champions League, that's for sure, but our aim is to compete and to develop our players and our game over the coming seasons. If we can do that at the highest level in Europe, that's what we aim to do." Goalkeeper Craig Gordon agrees with his manager that Celtic are improving on the European stage. "I think it comes from knowing the way we want to play from having an organisation and knowledge of our tactics," Gordon said. "We've obviously worked on it for a year and the manager's continuously working on that with us. "We've come back from setbacks and still won games so we're confident that no matter the situation or scenario we've got the player and teammate round about us that can pull us out of anything." The Tory leader is in Wales as the party prepares to launch its Welsh manifesto for the general election. Mr Cameron has made Labour's record in office in Cardiff Bay a big part of the general election campaign, with references to the NHS's performance. "The dragon on our flag may be red, but our country will always be better off blue," he will say. "The people of Wales already know more than most the damage Labour can do. "Cutting health spending and taking their eye off the ball on education. "This is the way Labour treats the nation of Nye Bevan and Dylan Thomas. "Seriously, where is it written that Wales votes Labour?" Mr Cameron will say that jobs and the economy are the issues that matter most to voters at the election. And he will use the growing aerospace industry as an example of Wales's economic success over the past few years. In the next parliament, the Conservatives are pledging to increase the tax free personal allowance to £12,500, benefitting 1.4m tax payers. Secretary of State for Wales Stephen Crabb said this shows a Tory government will "get things done for Wales." There is also a commitment to make people working 30 hours on the minimum wage exempt from paying income tax. As part of the launch, the Tories will highlight their record in Wales during the last five years of government. This includes 52,000 new jobs and 22,400 businesses created since 2010, as well as 1.2m people getting a tax cut. Welsh Conservatives have also said that the £8bn extra pledged to fund the NHS in England will result in more money for the Welsh government. Mr Crabb said: "By rolling up our sleeves and facing Wales' challenges head on, our ambitious programme for the next five years will create new and better jobs for Wales." UKIP will also launch its Welsh manifesto on Friday.
Brendan Rodgers says Rosenborg's 1-0 win over Ajax illustrates the progress his Celtic side have made in Europe. [NEXT_CONCEPT] People in Wales know "more than most the damage Labour can do", David Cameron will say today.
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It's the first of three significant tournaments in the Middle East and is followed by the Qatar Masters and the Dubai Desert Classic. Two of the world's top four players will be competing and that would have been three but for Rory McIlroy's rib injury forcing the Northern Irishman to withdraw. Here are a few key things to note about the next few days. The Abu Dhabi Golf Club's par-72 Championship course stretches out over 7,583 yards and is regarded as one of the finest in the Middle East. This is the 12th edition of the tournament and it always attracts an impressive field. The USA's Rickie Fowler triumphed in 2016, becoming the first American to do so since the tournament's inaugural event in 2006 when Chris DiMarco was victorious. California-born Fowler, 28, finished with a one-stroke winning margin over Belgium's Thomas Pieters, who also impressed during the 2016 Ryder Cup for Europe. Yes. Seven of them. Linlithgow's Stephen Gallacher makes his 500th European Tour event appearance in Abu Dhabi and after struggling with injury, is confident of getting back to his best form with new clubs and a new swing. Both East Kilbride's Marc Warren and Aberdeen's Richie Ramsay are in action and both will be eager to add to their most recent European Tour titles in 2014 and 2015, respectively. A joint fourth finish at the Alfred Dunhill Championship in Leopard Creek, South Africa has given Glasgow's Scott Jamieson confidence ahead of his first tournament of the year, while experienced Aberdonian Paul Lawrie also plays having amassed eight European Tour titles so far in his career. Cocksburnpath's David Drysdale did well to wind up tied for seventh at last week's SA Open and will be confident of kicking on to another strong finish in Abu Dhabi, while Grantown on Spey's Duncan Stewart wants to atone for a disappointing showing at Glendower. Minus the injured McIlroy, the headliners are world number three Dustin Johnson and world number four Henrik Stenson. The Swede topped the Race to Dubai order of merit in 2016, which added to his Open triumph at Royal Troon. American Johnson won the US Open at Oakmont last summer. Fowler will aim to become the second player to make a successful defence of the title after Germany's Martin Kaymer did so in 2011. The prize pot in Abu Dhabi equates to just under £2.2m, with the winner taking approximately £365,000.
The 2017 European Tour's desert swing gets underway on Thursday with the Abu Dhabi Championship.
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Man charged with murder of Polish national Marta Ligman, whose body was found in a suitcase in a London canal
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But - to help businesses - the party says employers could receive National Insurance incentives. Co-leader Jonathan Bartley claims the idea could also mean that British workers, who take some of the longest sick leave, become more productive. He says Labour's idea of adding extra bank holidays on saints' days could be one way of phasing the policy in. Mr Bartley says he hopes the Greens will double their numbers at the election on Thursday. Their only MP so far has been co-leader Caroline Lucas. He told BBC2's Daily Politics his party's plans for a four-day week needed to be considered because automation was likely to result in "large amounts of job losses". "At the same time we know we're getting stressed out in Britain - we work some of the longest hours in Europe," he said. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has said he would like to see four new UK-wide bank holidays created - one for each nation's patron saint day. Normally, England and Wales have eight bank holidays a year, Scotland nine, and Northern Ireland 10. Labour says the average for G20 countries is 12. Mr Bartley said building up the bank holidays would be one way of phasing in the four-day week.
The Green Party says its proposals for phasing in a four day working week should not see people's wages cut.
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A Saudi-led coalition launched air strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen six weeks ago. At least 1,400 people have been killed, the UN says. US Secretary of State John Kerry said Saudi Arabia and Yemeni rebels are discussing when to start the ceasefire. The Saudi foreign minister said any truce would depend on the rebels' co-operation. Saudi Arabia insists the Houthis must lay down their arms for the humanitarian ceasefire to be implemented. The rebels have not yet responded to the appeal. The Saudi-led coalition aims to restore the government of exiled President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi. He fled the capital Sanaa in February and took refuge in the southern port city of Aden, before leaving for Saudi Arabia. Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia has accused Shia-led Iran of backing the Houthis, who are affiliated with the Zaidi sect of Shia Islam. Tehran denies the accusations. Aden has seen some of the heaviest fighting in recent weeks, with hundreds of families reported to be trapped in the city centre with dwindling supplies. Jens Laerke, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Assistance, said at least 6,000 people had been injured in the fighting, many of them civilians in Aden. "People in Aden have endured extreme hardship as a result of conflict over the last six weeks and must be able to move to safer areas to seek medical and other assistance," Mr Laerke said. The key word in Saudi Arabia's proposed ceasefire announcement in Yemen is "conditional". It depends, say the Saudis, on Yemen's Houthi rebels laying down their weapons and stopping fighting. Even if their leaders agree to that condition, it is far from certain that will translate into a ceasefire on the ground. The last time the Saudis announced a pause in their air strikes to allow humanitarian aid to reach civilians, the Saudis say the rebels took advantage of the lull to seize a major military barracks and advance further into the port of Aden. The air strikes then resumed. The Saudis don't trust the rebels but they also know they can't keep bombing Yemen indefinitely. At a press conference in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al Jubeir said $274m (£180m) would be provided in humanitarian assistance. However, on Wednesday, a statement by 22 aid agencies working in Yemen said a humanitarian pause would "not alleviate the humanitarian impacts of the current conflict". The charities - who say their work is being hampered by a lack of fuel in Yemen - called instead for a permanent end to the fighting. Also in Riyadh, Mr Kerry said the US and Saudi Arabia did not have plans to send ground troops into Yemen. This is despite earlier pleas by Yemen's government to the UN to authorise the deployment of foreign ground forces. A letter to the UN said Houthis were "targeting anything that moves" in Aden. The 24-year-old left Nottingham Forest at the end of last season after failing to agree a new contract. Manager Simon Grayson told the club website: "This is a fantastic deal for the club because we had to fight off competition from a number of Championship and Premier League sides. "The fact he has chosen to join us is proof people are really buying into what we are trying to do here." Lynch becomes Town's fifth summer signing after the arrivals of defender Paul Dixon, midfielders Oliver Norwood and Adam Clayton, and forward Sean Scannell. Lynch was called up to the Wales squad for the friendly with Mexico in May but has yet to win an international cap.
Saudi Arabia says it is prepared to introduce a five-day humanitarian ceasefire in Yemen. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Huddersfield Town have signed defender Joel Lynch on a three-year deal.
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The team is looking to challenge Mercedes after finishing second in the 2015 constructors' championship. Four-time world champion Vettel won three races in his debut season with Ferrari but finished third in the drivers' competition. "We had a fantastic year last year and we all want more," said Vettel. "When I joined the team there were a lot of people changing their positions and it was a difficult time to have expectations. "But now we have had a much better winter to prepare and therefore we will be a strong team - as we have seen already last year - but even stronger this year." The new car sees Ferrari revert to the push-rod suspension for the first time in four years and large sections of white on its livery. German Vettel will once again partner Finnish driver Kimi Raikkonen, who won the team's last drivers' title in 2007. Ferrari president Sergio Marchionne has said that it would be "a tragedy" if the team failed to win a title in a 10-year span. The 2016 season starts with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne from March 18-20.
Sebastian Vettel says Ferrari will be "even stronger" than last year following the launch of their new SF16-H car for the 2016 season.
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The state oil firm's net loss widened to 36.9bn reais ($10.2bn; £7.1bn) in the three months to December. The company had to write down billions of dollars from assets like oil fields and drilling rigs after crude prices fell by more than 40%. Petrobras shares fell by nearly 6% in after hours US trading on the results. Its chief executive said in a press conference that 2015 was "an extremely difficult year for the oil industry". Petrobras has also been trying to deal with the fallout from an expanding corruption scandal that has gone to the top ranks of government and seen some of its former executives jailed. On Monday police arrested a man in Portugal they say was laundering payments for two of the jailed Petrobras executives. Police say the man, Raul Schmidt Felipe Junior, may also have acted as an intermediary between some foreign companies and Petrobras. Brazil is also mired in its worst recession in a century, which has led to weak demand at home for its fuel products. To maintain its finances, the firm has drastically reduced its spending and investment plans. Petrobras is also looking to sell some of its assets in order to raise more than $14bn. Here's BBC News Channel chief political correspondent Vicki Young's afternoon round-up: Follow all the reaction, key points and analysis of the debate on our rolling live coverage. Labour's non-dom pledge unravels? Footage emerges of shadow chancellor Ed Balls telling BBC Radio Leeds in January: "If you abolish the whole status it will end up costing Britain money because some people will leave the country." For sale: a general election "battle bus", at the bargain price of £25,000. It weighs 18-tonnes, is bombproof, has fewer than 14,000 miles on the clock and counts among its previous owners, the former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. She used it during the 1983 general election campaign. It's not the only bus to have caused excitement in this election campaign. Labour's "Woman to Woman" campaign bus was derided when it was first unveiled, with much of the criticism reserved for the colour. Labour's Harriet Harman defended the pink hue, saying it was important to make sure the bus was conspicuous. Labour leader Ed Miliband: "Stop defending the indefensible and abolish the non-dom rule - it's the right thing for the country." Chancellor George Osborne, on Labour's non-dom proposal: "If you look at what Ed Miliband has announced today, it is a total shambles. Within hours the policy has unravelled." Beth Rigby, deputy political editor, Financial Times tweets: "Like a chocolate truffle wrapped in gold leaf, non-dom status is nice to have, hard to justify." Tory MEP Daniel Hannan writes in the Daily Mail: "What the blithering flip was he thinking? How did Tony Blair imagine that it would help Ed Miliband if he were to pop up mid-election and remind us that Labour is too disdainful of ordinary voters to ask their opinion on EU membership?" In pictures This shot of David Cameron helping with a reading lesson at the Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Primary School near Bolton features in our collection of the best photos from the day's campaigning. Tweet of the day Paul Brand, ITV News, â€
Brazil's Petrobras, which is at the centre of a massive corruption scandal, has posted its biggest ever quarterly loss due to the plunge in oil prices. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A daily guide to the key stories, newspaper headlines and quotes from the campaign for the 7 May general election.
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But only Park Place in Cathays will be closed to all traffic until 00:00 BST on Friday. It will become a street market and host a transport exhibition giving information on sustainable travel. While all commuters will be encouraged to leave their cars at home in a move designed to combat air pollution, no other areas will be closed off. Jane Lorimer, director of cycle charity Sustrans Cymru said it was a "positive first step". Councillors backed plans to ban cars in the city centre for one day each year, to cut air pollution, last October. But cabinet member Ramesh Patel said it would be "grossly irresponsible" to widen the area before the first plan had been reviewed. He added: "With the new bus interchange developing, a cycling strategy being produced, planned investment in our railways and future plans for the metro, sustainable transport is a major priority for the council. "Making walking, cycling and public transport more attractive and viable options for commuters and residents are integral to Cardiff's continued development and achieving our aspiration to become Europe's most liveable capital city." Car-free days already take place in Delhi, Paris and London. It is claimed air pollution is linked to tens of thousands of deaths in the UK annually. The £36m museum, opened last May, reunited the wreck with the 19,000 artefacts discovered with it. Among the items found was a nit comb used by Tudor sailors, with nits still attached. The Prince of Wales, who is president of the Mary Rose Trust, was accompanied by the Duchess of Cornwall. He was one of the last people to dive down to the wreck in 1982, before watching the hull being raised from the site just outside Portsmouth Harbour. During his visit, the prince handled some of the artefacts and held a replica longbow. He said: "I don't want to put my shoulder out." The foundation stone for the ship's museum was laid by Prince Harry in 2011. The warship was discovered in 1971 in Portsmouth Harbour where it was sunk in battle in 1545 while leading an attack on a French invasion fleet. After the visit to the warship, Prince Charles was due to visit one of the Royal Navy's newest and most advanced warships, the Type 45 destroyer HMS Dragon, at Portsmouth naval base. It is the second Chinese firm after the HNA Group to invest in the Australian carrier, which hopes to benefit from growing numbers of China tourists. More than one million mainlanders visited Australia last year and that is forecast to grow to 1.5m by 2020. Shares of Virgin Australia, which plans to launch direct flights to China next year, rose by 5.4% on Friday. Shares of Air New Zealand rose by more than 3% in Wellington trading following the news. Nanshan will pay 33 Australian cents a share for the slice of the company, valuing it at about 230m Australian dollars (£118m; $170m). Aside from Nanshan and HNA, Singapore Airlines and Etihad Airways are also major shareholders in Virgin Australia. Last month, HNA bought 13% of Virgin Australia for $118m but plans to raise that stake to about 20% in the future. "We believe Nanshan Group will be a very strong, positive and complimentary shareholder for Virgin Australia," Air New Zealand Chairman Tony Carter said in a statement. "The sale will allow Air New Zealand to focus on its own growth opportunities, while still continuing its long-standing alliance with Virgin Australia on the trans-Tasman network".
Concerns over air pollution in the city centre means Cardiff will hold its first car-free day on Thursday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Prince Charles has toured the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth, 38 years after he first dived down to the wreck of the Tudor warship. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Chinese group Nanshan has bought a 20% stake in Virgin Australia from Air New Zealand.
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Contrary to Louis van Gaal's comments, sources close to De Gea say he never expressed a desire not to play. De Gea is not happy to have been made to train with United's reserve team. He will not be considered by manager Van Gaal until the transfer window shuts. De Gea, 24, is wanted by Real Madrid. United are demanding a world record fee and defender Sergio Ramos in exchange. Before United's opening Premier League game against Tottenham on 8 August, Van Gaal said he did not think De Gea was in the right frame of mind to play and "wasn't the same" as last season. He repeated his view when he spoke to the media before his side's visit to Aston Villa on Friday evening, when Argentina's Sergio Romero is expected to keep his place. The opposing opinions on De Gea's willingness to play do not suggest a particularly harmonious state of affairs, which Real Madrid will hope to exploit before the 1 September transfer deadline. United are determined to be seen as Real's financial equals and have indicated a willingness to let De Gea's contract, which expires at the end of the season, run down rather than sell the former Atletico Madrid man on the cheap. It will be a test of executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward's skills as to whether that stance can be maintained over the next fortnight. Van Gaal would need time to bring in further cover in the goalkeeping department if De Gea did leave given another Spain international, Victor Valdes, is currently being frozen out after refusing to play for United's Under-21s side last season.
David De Gea is surprised at being left out of Manchester United's team for the first two games of the season.
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They want to "stand up for her name", saying they felt they let her down in the past by not protecting her. The programme will include William and Harry speaking about the week following her death, from the moment they heard the news to the day of her funeral. It comes ahead of the 20th anniversary of Diana's death on 31 August. In the 90-minute documentary, with the working title Diana, William is to say: "Part of the reason why Harry and I want to do this is because we feel we owe it to her. "I think an element of it is feeling like we let her down when we were younger. We couldn't protect her. "We feel we at least owe her 20 years on to stand up for her name and remind everybody of the character and person that she was. "Do our duties as sons in protecting her." Harry said the outpouring of emotion and love was "shocking" to him as a young boy. "It was beautiful at the same time, and it was amazing, now looking back at it, it was amazing that our mother had such a huge effect on so many people. "When you're that young and something like that happens to you, I think it's lodged in here, there, wherever - in your heart, in your head and it stays there for a very, very long time. "I think it's never going to be easy for the two of us to talk about our mother, but 20 years on seems like a good time to remind people of the difference that she made not just to the royal family but also to the world." The film features interviews with close friends, political figures and journalists, some of whom are speaking about Diana's death and its aftermath for the first time. The BBC has also announced a one-off drama called Diana and I, about the impact of Diana's death on four members of the public. William also spoke to GQ this week about his mother's death and his sadness that she had not lived to meet his wife Catherine or children George and Charlotte. News of the documentary comes days after Channel 5 broadcast Seven Days that Shook the Windsors , looking at the aftermath of Diana's death. A drama on BBC Two caused controversy last month when it aired royal drama King Charles III, based on Mike Bartlett's play of the same name, which sees the Prince of Wales succeeding his mother and sparking a constitutional crisis. The actor who plays Prince William said he was "surprised" by the controversy it has caused. In 2013 double Oscar nominee Naomi Watts starred in a film called Diana, which covered the last two years of her life. There was some controversy about the movie, with some describing it as being in poor taste, but Watts said at the time she hoped it had been done in a "respectful and sensitive" way. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. Ten people complained over the episode, which went out live on ITV on 17 May. In a segment on online harassment Harvey swore when Price asked him what he says to people who are mean to him. An Ofcom spokesperson said they were investigating the programme because it "included the most offensive language before the watershed". Fourteen-year-old Harvey has multiple disabilities including Septo-Optim Dysplasia and Ofcom said they had asked ITV for background information about "how they had ensured due care of Harvey" with regards to his welfare. "We received sufficient assurances for us to decide not to pursue potential issues in this area further," an Ofcom spokesperson said. The TV watchdog is also investigating episodes of Big Brother and This Morning. Ofcom is investigating sexual scenes in an episode of Big Brother broadcast on 12 June on Channel 5. The watchdog received 634 broadcast complaints about the Sunday night episode that went out after 2100 BST. They are investigating whether sexual scenes in the episode featuring Marco Pierre White Jr and Laura Carter "exceeded generally accepted standards for its time of broadcast". An episode of This Morning on 25 May this year that featured sex toys is also being looked into. The programme featured Tracey Cox discussing vibrators and made comments about a website which sells some of the vibrators. Tracey Cox has her own range of products which can be purchased exclusively via that website. They are investigating whether "editorial content was distinct from advertising in this programme, and whether products were given undue prominence".
The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry say they are doing their duty as sons by taking part in a BBC documentary about their mother. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Loose Women is being investigated by media watchdog Ofcom for offensive language over an episode in which Katie Price's disabled son Harvey swore.
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It is hoped the discoveries may help unravel the purpose of the thousands of stone vessels scattered over hundreds of square kilometres in central Laos. February's excavations were part of a five-year project by the Laos government and Australian scientists. The researchers said it was the biggest attempt since the 1930s to understand who placed the jars and why. The jars are believed to have been placed in Xieng Khouang province at least 2,000 years ago. This is not the first time human remains have been found there. But Dr Dougald O'Reilly from the Australian National University (ANU) school of archaeology told the BBC three different types of burials had now been discovered; bones placed in pits with a large limestone block on top, bones buried in ceramic vessels, and a single body in a grave. "I don't think there is any doubt now that these jars were related to mortuary ritual," Mr O'Reilly said. "There is no evidence for habitation around the jars." Mr O'Reilly said it was possible the jars were used to hold bodies until they had decomposed, so just the bones could be buried. But he sounded a note of caution: "It's probably quite difficult to ascertain that... because they've been exposed for such a long time". "We're at very early stages of research." The researchers will be returning next year, to look at a forested, upland area of the Plain of Jars, which is not, in fact, a flat plain. "My gut feeling is that we'll find very similar mortuary rituals," Dr O'Reilly said, "but it will be interesting to compare". One reason why there have been so few major studies done of the Plain of Jars in recent decades is that there were so many unexploded bombs and mines in the area after the Vietnam War, Dr O'Reilly said. The Plain was on the North Vietnamese supply route known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail and was bombed heavily by the US. Digging, and even access to remote sites, was dangerous, although most of the unexploded ordnance has now been cleared. Laos is hoping to have the Plain of Jars listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Researchers in Laos have uncovered ancient human burial practices at the mysterious Plain of Jars.
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The initiative, led by Scottish Wildcat Action (SWA), is the largest of its kind designed to protect the species from extinction. Pop-up clinics have been set up so vets can perform the operations in remote areas such as the Morvern peninsula. Cameras traps are also being used to get a better understanding of the spread of the species. The Scottish wildcat populations have been plummeting in recent decades. There are believed to be fewer than 300 remaining in Scotland. Dr Keri Langridge, from SWA, said: "What we hoped to find was evidence that we still had some wildcats remaining on Morvern. "Fortunately we have found some wildcats clinging on still on the Morvern peninsula, which is fantastic news." The aim of the neutering effort is to stop the wildcats mating with feral or domestic felines, which dilutes the purity of the animal. Dr Langridge added: "We don't have any illusions that this is a very ambitious project. "We have very high targets. To be effective, 'trap, neuter, release' needs to get 75% of the feral cat population so we need the public's help." About 150 cameras, which are triggered by heat and movement, have been gathering images of both feral and wildcats. Only three wildcats on Morvern have been captured on film. But the team have also been asking for local knowledge about the locations of feral cats. That data has allowed them to lay targeted traps to catch specific animals which live close to wildcats. Wildcat officer Emma Rawling brought a feral tabby to the pop-up clinic. She said: "Judging by the markings patterns and the overall physique of the cat, it's definitely a cat of domestic origin, it's got what we call a marble tabby pattern. "But the scary thing is it was living right next to a really good wildcat so it was a really important one to get caught and neutered." Vet Alice Bacon, from Dingwall, is one of the vets who has been performing the operations. She said: "We know that domestic cats, feral and pet domestic cats, are now the major threat to wildcats because of hybridisation and disease control so without reducing the population of entire feral cats we'll be unable to secure a future for Scottish wildcats." The landscape at Morvern, with plenty of ground cover, is ideal territory for wildcats. It is one of six priority areas where SWA has been intensively studying the populations and trying to protect them. Few of us may have seen these animals in the flesh, but they remain an iconic Scottish species whose continued existence is far from guaranteed.
About 80 feral cats have been neutered across Scotland as part of a project to prevent them breeding with wildcats.
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Greg Revell from Long Eaton, Derbyshire, died on 11 June at HMP Glen Parva in Leicestershire. An inquest jury at Leicester Town Hall heard he was depressed and had tried to take his own life three months earlier. The prison service said it would look at the findings to see what further lessons could be learned. The inquest concluded Mr Revell, who had a history of self-harm, committed suicide. The jury found his needs were not properly assessed and prison staff failed to implement a procedure called an Assessment Care in Custody Teamwork (ACCT). The assistant coroner for Leicester and South Leicestershire, Lydia Brown, said injuries on Mr Revell's neck should have alerted staff. The coroner also expressed concerns about a reliance on postal services to deliver Mr Revell's notes from his GP. Speaking after the inquest, Greg's mother Karin said: "We are absolutely devastated by the lack of care and treatment for Greg. "He was a vulnerable young man, but not one member of staff took the time to assess his vulnerabilities fully." The inquest also heard another young man had killed himself at the prison in recent weeks. Glen Parva was labelled unsafe by HM Inspectorate of Prisons in August 2014 following an inspection in April. Concerns were raised about bullying, linked to self-harm and suicides. The prison has applied for funding in order to provide additional "safe cells" for vulnerable people. It currently has two. Staff have also been given further training about when to open the ACCT process, logging details and sharing information. The coroner is writing to Glen Parva and HM Inspectorate of Prisons to express her concerns relating to Mr Revell's care at the prison. A prison service spokeswoman said: "Every death in custody is a tragedy which is why reducing the number of self-inflicted deaths is a priority. "We will carefully consider the findings of the inquest to see what further lessons can be learned in addition to the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman's investigation." Tom Dunn opened the scoring in the first minute, while Paul Grant, Anthony Watson and Tom Homer all crossed to wrap up a bonus point by half-time. Six further tries followed, with Grant and Watson each getting their second, before Rhys Priestland, Zach Mercer, Ben Tapuai and Ross Batty all crossed. Mosese Ratuvou scored the French side's only try of the game. Bath's comprehensive victory means they finish top of Pool Four. And their superior points difference over Pool Three winners Brive, who also finished with 23 points, means they pipped the French side - their likely opponents in the last eight - to a home quarter-final. Bath: Homer; Rokoduguni, Joseph, Fruean, Watson; Ford (co-capt), Fotuali'i; Catt, Dunn, Palma-Newport, Ewels, Stooke, Mercer, Louw (co-capt), Grant. Replacements: Batty, Obano, Knight, Charteris, Mercer, Cook, Priestland, Tapuai. Pau: Buros; Lestremeau, Fumat, Dupouy, Ratuvou; Fajardo, Moa Teutau; Hurou, Lespiaucq Brettes Sclavi, Pesenti, Ramsay, Habel Kuffner, Dougall, Butler (capt). Replacements: Boundjema, Jacquot, Tierney, Tutaia, Daubagna, Dupichot, Malie, Bernad. Sin-bin: Habel Kuffner (36) Ref: Ben Whitehouse For the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.
A coroner has criticised a young offenders' institution for failing to identify the risk to an 18-year-old remand prisoner who hanged himself. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Bath secured a home European Challenge Cup quarter-final with 10-try thrashing of Pau at The Rec.
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Conservative Nusrat Ghani said the term was used by abusers as a "pathetic self-justification" for their violence. She proposed a bill in the House of Commons that would ban the use of the description in official publications. The move would make it clear that "cultural and religious sensitivities are not a barrier to justice", the MP for Wealden in East Sussex said. There is no specific offence of "honour-based" violence. The Crown Prosecution Service describes it as a "collection of practices, which are used to control behaviour within families or other social groups to protect perceived cultural and religious beliefs and/or honour". Ms Ghani said police had been put off investigating such crimes because they fear being branded "racist". "Language matters," she told the Commons. "The use of the term 'honour' to describe a violent criminal act - sometimes committed against a man, but more often against a woman - can be explained only as a means of self-justification for the perpetrator. "It diminishes the victim and provides a convenient excuse for what in our society we should accurately and simply call murder, rape, abuse or enslavement. "I want us in this House to send a clear message that the excuses end here." Her Crime (Aggravated Murder of and Violence against Women) Bill would also require the UK authorities to fund assistance for British women attacked in other countries and for the bodies of those murdered to be repatriated. UK nationals guilty of such offences towards other UK nationals overseas would also face prosecution in British courts, her bill states. MPs agreed the bill should be able to proceed, although Conservative MP Philip Davies - who said it was too focused on women and did not mention honour crime towards men - objected. Mr Davies said he would continue to oppose legislation "unjustifiably aimed at dealing with just one gender", adding: "Yes, of course women are far more likely to be the victims of honour-based crimes than men, but they are not exclusively the victims of these crimes. "As far as I am concerned, all these things are just as bad as each other." The bill will be heard again on 24 March, although it is unlikely to become law without the government's support.
An MP is attempting to ban authorities from describing murders as "honour killings".
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Lee Orton, who runs charity Goals 4 Hearts, spoke out after defender Daniel Wilkinson's death, on Monday. Wilkinson, 24, who played for Shaw Lane AFC, collapsed during a cup game at Brighouse Town FC's stadium. Mr Orton, 33, said many smaller clubs are still without defibrillators because they can cost up to £1,000. The former Brighouse player, who survived a heart attack while playing with Aimbry in the Huddersfield District League in 2013, supplied the defibrillator in use at the club. Media reports indicated staff at the St Giles Road ground used the equipment on Wilkinson, but he was pronounced dead after being taken to hospital. Mr Orton said despite the tragic outcome, defibrillators are very important. "Without one, a person's chances of survival decreases by 15% each minute," he said. "It can make all the difference." The charity raises awareness of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) and ensures the correct equipment is available in all public places. Earlier, players and supporters from both clubs laid flowers on the pitch in tribute to Wilkinson, who had a suspected heart attack. As a mark of respect, Brighouse has announced Saturday's home fixture against Colne FC has been postponed. Wilkinson started his career at Hull City, before loan moves to Harrogate Town and North Ferriby United. He later played for Loughborough University, Scarborough Athletic and Goole, joining Shaw Lane from Rushall Olympic in the summer. "The club would like to thank everyone for their heartfelt messages," said Shaw Lane chairman Craig Wood in a statement. The Evo-Stik Northern Premier League has asked fans, players and officials to observe a minute's silence at fixtures this week to mark Wilkinson's death.
A footballer who survived a heart attack during a game is urging more clubs to get defibrillators after a young player collapsed and died.
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Speaking at Stormont during a manifesto launch for the general election David McNarry said it was a much bigger issue than Europe. The party is fielding 10 candidates in the general election. Mr McNarry, the party's leader in Northern Ireland, said people had concerns about housing, health and schools but mainly immigration. "Immigration is a bigger issue here in Northern Ireland than people would think and people are really concerned about immigration; concerned about the influx of people coming in here taking up room in schools, adding to hospital waiting lists etc so there's a big understanding exercise has got to be done as well," he said. Main pledges Policy guide: Where the parties stand "Europe not so much at the moment but immigration right at the top." The party's policies include: George Hamilton was giving evidence to the NI Affairs Committee which is looking at the future of the border following Brexit. Mr Hamilton said he did not think police checkpoints were likely, however. He said any border controls were more likely to relate to customs. He said the PSNI's Brexit priority was preserving information sharing arrangements with the Republic of Ireland and replacing the European Arrest Warrant. He added that this may need new legislation or bi-lateral arrangements.
Immigration is "right at the top" of the concerns of people in Northern Ireland, according to UKIP. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Checkpoints on the Irish border would be "static and obvious" targets for dissident republicans, the PSNI Chief Constable has said.
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Donovan Kitching, 33 from St John's, pleaded guilty to punching a guard in the head on 10 March. He attacked the guard while serving a 10 year and 72 day sentence for causing the death of Gwen Valentine from Winchester, Hampshire in October 2014. Kitching was ordered to serve a further four months by Douglas courthouse.
A man serving a 10 year sentence for killing a woman while drink-driving has had his jail term extended for assaulting a prison guard.
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Six-month-old Ruby-Grace Gaunt, her mother Amy Smith and her friend Edward Green, both 17, died in the blaze in North Street, Langley Mill, in June. Peter Eyre, 44, and his two sons, Simon, 24, and Anthony, 22, all of Sandiacre, were convicted at Nottingham Crown Court. All three were accused of starting the fire as an act of revenge. During the trial the court was told the "catalyst" for the attack was a dispute over a stolen moped, which had been stolen by another of his sons, the court heard. The moped belonged to Miss Smith's boyfriend, Shaun Gaunt, 18 - who escaped the fire with the help of neighbours. The prosecution said following a confrontation, Peter, Simon and Anthony Eyre drove to Langley Mill and petrol was poured outside the front door of the block of flats where Mr Gaunt lived. The door was the only means of entry and exit, the court was told. During his evidence, Peter Eyre denied being part of any plan to kill anyone or start a fire. Ruby-Grace was found in her dead mother's arms on a landing, while Mr Green was found dead near the front door.
A man and his two sons have been found guilty of murdering two teenagers and a baby in a house fire in Derbyshire.
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Provincial officials say many of the deaths were caused by Nato air strikes. The air support was called in after troops were surrounded by Taliban militants, who took shelter in civilian homes, the spokesman said. Nato says it will investigate reports of civilian deaths. Two US soldiers were also killed in the fighting. "US forces conducted strikes in Kunduz to defend friendly forces. All civilian casualty claims will be investigated," the Nato-led Resolute Support mission said. Mahmood Danish, a spokesman for the governor of Kunduz province, told the BBC the operation took place in an area called Body Kandahari, about 5km (3 miles) from Kunduz city centre. There were angry protests from civilians, who brought bodies of some of the dead to the governor's office in Kunduz city. Images showed the body of an infant girl being carried by a group of civilians. Taza Gul, a 55-year-old labourer, said: "I am heartbroken. I have lost seven members of my family. I want to know, why these innocent children were killed? Were they Taliban? No, they were innocent children." A further 25 civilians were wounded in the operation in Kunduz, Mr Danish said, and 26 Taliban fighters were killed, including two commanders. The Taliban say only three of their fighters were killed. The US military said its soldiers died after coming under fire during a mission to clear a Taliban position. Two other US soldiers were wounded, it said. General John Nicholson said the soldiers' loss was "heartbreaking". Taliban fighters came close to overrunning Kunduz city last month and the security situation in the area remains febrile. The insurgents control large areas of the province around the city. US combat operations against the Taliban officially ended in 2014 but special forces have continued to provide support to Afghan troops. Afghan forces have suffered thousands of casualties, with more than 5,500 killed in the first eight months of 2016. All the families had fled their homes and were at risk of repeated human rights abuse, a spokesman told the BBC. Civil society groups helped take the families to safety in Lebanon. Aleppo has been devastated by three years of fierce fighting between Syrian government forces, rebels and jihadist militants. Before the war, it had a Christian population of around 160,000, one of the biggest in the Middle East. The refugees, who included Yazidis as well as Christians, were moved out along the only open road from Aleppo to the Lebanese border. The operation took place over two months and amid great secrecy. Belgium is one of several European countries that have come under pressure to help Christians and other religious minorities in Syria threatened with persecution. "We did it via civil society organisations which could get them out of there," a foreign ministry spokesman said. Few other details have been revealed, but the spokesman said some of the families had connections with people already in Belgium. They were met on the Lebanese border by representatives from the Belgian embassy in Beirut with the help of the NGOs and have now all arrived in Belgium. The families are now expected to be granted asylum in Belgium. Belgium has until now only offered asylum to Syrian refugees through the United Nations, national media report. Officers on patrol in Limavady were told at around 22:00 BST that a man was lying on Connell Street in the town, close to commercial premises. The man, 69, was declared dead at the scene. After a post-mortem examination, police do not believe there were any suspicious circumstances surrounding his death.
Thirty civilians have been killed in northern Afghanistan during an Afghan special forces mission supported by Nato, an Afghan spokesman says. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Some 240 people, mainly Christians, have been brought out of Syria's second city of Aleppo and taken to Belgium, the government in Brussels says. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The death of a man found dead on a street in County Londonderry on Sunday is not being treated as suspicious.
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The downgrading of neonatal services at North Tees Hospital in Stockton had been recommended by NHS England. Babies would have been sent to neonatal intensive care units in Middlesbrough, Sunderland or Newcastle instead. The North East Joint Health Scrutiny Committee chairman said he was "totally unconvinced" by the case for a special care-only service at North Tees. Ray Martin Wells, who is also a Hartlepool councillor, said the committee made it clear any potential changes were going to be looked at "extremely carefully". As part of a review of services for babies in the region a Royal College of Paediatrics report recommended concentrating resources in larger regional centres, saying they offered the best care from specialist staff. Mr Martin Wells said the evidence was "less than convincing". Health bosses have confirmed there would be "no major downgrading" of neonatal services at North Tees, Hartlepool Council said. Shaun and Kirsty Lowther, whose premature twins were cared for at North Tees, helped co-ordinate a petition against the plans, signed by more than 6,000 people. Mrs Lowther said it would be "absolutely diabolical" if the neonatal unit closed. "In our circumstances, if we'd had to travel with Ava and Noah, my twins, to James Cook [hospital] they wouldn't have survived the journey. "So, to us, it's a matter of life and death." It has been agreed the provision of services will be looked at as part of a wider review and consultation in autumn next year.
Plans to close a newborn baby unit have been rejected by a health scrutiny committee representing councils.
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The track dried out after a wet start with Rea and Kawasaki team-mate Tom Sykes coming in earlier than their rivals for a tyre change. It was a decisive move and Rea finished two seconds ahead of the English rider with Michael van der Mark third. Welshman Chaz Davies came in fifth and remains second in the series. Davies, who was second to reigning champion Rea in Saturday's opener, is 14 points ahead of Sykes. Australian Josh Brookes set the early pace on Sunday before Rea, who was lying fourth, and Sykes came into the pits with 14 laps remaining. The Kawasaki pair were soon out in front and they went head-to-head for the win but Sykes could find no way past Rea. Dutchman Van der Mark delighted home fans by completing the podium. Lorenzo Savadori was fourth while Brookes crashed out as he attempted to make up ground late in the race. It was a ninth Assen victory for 29-year-old Rea and his fifth successive win at the Netherlands circuit. Wood, 26, has had two operations on his left ankle since injuring it against Pakistan in Dubai in October. The Ashes winner, who has taken 25 wickets in eight Tests, returned in June for Durham against Sri Lanka A. England are preparing for the first Test match against Pakistan, which starts on Thursday. The Lions will play a 50-over tri-series against Sri Lanka A and Pakistan A, beginning on 18 July at Cheltenham. Meanwhile, Middlesex's Max Holden will lead England under-19s against their Sri Lankan counterparts in a series of two four-day matches and three one-day games. England Lions squad: Dawid Malan (Middlesex, captain), Daniel Bell-Drummond (Kent), Ben Duckett (Northants), Joe Clarke (Worcestershire), Brett D'Oliveira (Worcestershire), Sam Billings (Kent, wk), Liam Livingstone (Lancashire), Liam Dawson (Hampshire), Tom Curran (Surrey), Jamie Overton (Somerset), Saqib Mahmood (Lancashire), George Garton (Sussex), Mark Wood (Durham), Sam Curran (Surrey, last two matches only) Tri-series fixtures 18 July, Cheltenham - Pakistan A v Sri Lanka A 19 July, Cheltenham - England Lions v Pakistan A 21 July, Northampton - England Lions v Sri Lanka A 22 July, Northampton - Pakistan A v Sri Lanka A 24 July, Canterbury - England Lions v Pakistan A 25 July, Canterbury - England Lions v Sri Lanka A England under-19s squad: Max Holden (Middlesex, captain), Josh Dell, Zen Malik, Josh Tongue, Ben Twohig, Ollie Westbury* (all Worcestershire), George Hankins (Gloucestershire), George Bartlett, Dom Bess**, Ben Green** (all Somerset), Ollie Pope (wk), Amar Virdi* (both Surrey), George Panayi* (Warwickshire), Aaron Beard (Essex), Ed Barnes (Yorkshire), Josh Coughlin* (Durham), Tom Moores** (wk), Jack Blatherwick** (both Nottinghamshire) * Four-day matches only ** One-day matches only Fixtures 21-22 July, Loughborough - England under-19s v Unicorns 26-29 July, Cambridge - England under-19s v Sri Lanka under-19s 3-6 August, Northampton - England under-19s v Sri Lanka under-19s 10 August, Wormsley - England under-19s v Sri Lanka under-19s 13 August, Chelmsford - England under-19s v Sri Lanka under-19s 16 August, Canterbury - England under-19s v Sri Lanka under-19s
Jonathan Rea followed up Saturday's win at Assen with victory in the second race to move 45 points clear at the top of the World Superbike standings. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Durham fast bowler Mark Wood trained with England at Lord's on Tuesday after being added to the Lions squad as he steps up his recovery from injury.
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Peter Atilla, 46, from Northampton, denies raping a woman in Merthyr Tydfil in 2013, but has no recollection because of the disorder. Dr Chris Idzikowski, a consultant psychiatrist, said he could have been suffering from parasomnia - unwanted behaviour during sleep. He told Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court the evidence supporting this was "weak". A jury heard the former Royal Logistics Corps officer may have been in "action mode" the night after arriving back in the UK. Dr Idzikowski said: "I've experience of other soldiers coming back off tour and experiencing things such as untoward behaviour (while asleep). I know of soldiers marching in their sleep even." He told the court one of the symptoms of parasomnia was sexsomnia, "a type of arousal" which can lead to sexual behaviour from a person while in deep sleep. Dr Idzikowski said Mr Atilla, who served "with distinction" in the first Gulf War, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, may have been triggered by something as simple as a sound. He admitted the evidence the disorder led to Mr Atilla having sex with the woman while asleep was "weak" but said he could not exclude it from being possible. Another psychiatrist, Dr Chandan Seghal, said he too "could not exclude" the attack relating to a sleep disorder, but agreed the evidence was "weak." Dyfed Thomas, prosecuting, told the court Mr Atilla had no recollections of him showing signs of sexsomnia in the past or since the incident. He said the woman awoke to find Mr Atilla naked on top of her and jurors were told her mother heard Mr Atilla later admit he had raped her daughter. Jane Hutt attacked plans to scrap housing benefit for under 21 year olds, saying the young would be "hit hard". Mr Osborne also announced a compulsory living wage of £7.20 an hour from next April, rising to £9 by 2020. Wales Office Minister Alun Cairns said "difficult decisions" were taken "in the interests of the country" and people would see the benefit. The chancellor stressed his commitment to a funding floor for the Welsh government's annual grant from the Treasury, more powers for Wales and road and rail improvements. But Ms Hutt told BBC Wales some of his other measures would make young people suffer. "Particularly worrying and bad is the assault on young people," she said. "The fact that young people - 18 to 21-year-olds - who of course want to 'earn or learn' as he says, are going to have their housing benefit taken away from them or not be eligible for it automatically. "I think young people are going to be hit hard by this Budget." Mr Cairns told BBC Radio Wales the UK government was "determined to ensure those who work hard, those who play by the system, start to benefit now because it's been so tough over some recent years". "We took some difficult decisions over the last five years - they weren't all popular," he said. "But at the election I think people recognised that they were in the interests of the country. "Further difficult decisions were taken yesterday, but people will start to see the benefit."
A former soldier could have raped a woman while suffering from a sleep disorder, a court has heard. [NEXT_CONCEPT] George Osborne's Budget amounts to an assault on young people, the Welsh government's finance minister has said.