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Summarize the following excerpt. | Kathleen Findlay's mother took her own life after suffering from mental health problems.
She has written poetry about her experiences in the wake of her mother's death.
The Choose Life suicide prevention group said Christmas can be a "difficult" time for the lonely.
There were believed to be more than 50 suicides in the north east of Scotland in 2011.
Mrs Findlay told BBC Scotland: "My mum committed suicide when I was 15 which was over 30 years ago.
"It has affected the whole family.
"I bottled it up for 30 years. If we all opened up we could support each other."
Neil Murray, from Choose Life, said he believed the risks can be greater for those affected by or at risk from suicide over the festive period.
He said: "Christmas is a time for families, but not everyone is close to their family.
"Loneliness is a terrible thing.
"If you are feeling low or depressed there are organisations you can turn to."
Sutton resigned in April, ending a 14-year involvement with British Cycling.
He had been suspended by the sporting body amid claims of sexism and discrimination towards elite cyclists, although he denies the allegations.
"It was a hard few days when he first left and it was tough for the whole programme," said James.
"But we had to move on and I had to knuckle down and get on with my training, knowing it would be a journey without him but I still had to get in the best possible form before Rio."
Welsh sprinter James, 24, is particularly grateful to Sutton for the role he played in keeping her in the sport during a torrid two-year spell that saw her overcome serious knee and shoulder injuries and a cancer scare.
Having won world keirin and sprint titles in 2013, James almost quit in 2015.
"Shane was the one who always believed in me getting back," said James, who also missed London 2012 because of illness and injury.
"He said to me: 'You don't have to do this. You have already achieved a lot and you can be happy with what you've done.'
"That gave me that bit extra to want to come back. He was the one who could see it, when I couldn't. He kept me on the programme, kept me working hard."
James also admitted that Sutton's "straight-talking" could upset others but said she did not think he was a bully.
"He's always been brutally honest with me but the truth is better than lies," she added.
Media playback is not supported on this device
The rally began in November and pilots have had adventure-filled journeys.
The planes have mostly open cockpits and are equipped with only rudimentary navigation and safety equipment.
They landed beside the Egyptian pyramids and flew over Mount Kilimanjaro on the way.
The Crete2Cape rally, which began on 11 November, follows "in the footsteps of the pioneering flights in the 1920s" connecting "some of the most beautiful and evocative points in Africa".
It is meant to recreate the first African aviation route drawn up in the 1930s.
The Vintage Air Rally website describes the route as "flying low along the Nile from Cairo to Khartoum, past the highlands of Ethiopia before the plains of Kenya and the home of African aviation in Nairobi".
The rally took the pilots past Mount Kilimanjaro and over the Serengeti national park before flying over Zanzibar, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
One of the pilots on the route is reported to have experienced total engine failure.
Another, 72-year-old British man Maurice Kirk, went missing twice, was arrested in Ethiopia and touched down in battle-hit South Sudan instead of Kenya.
Rally organiser Sam Rutherford said that, although the rally had been successful, "I'll breathe a massive sigh of relief when we get to Cape Town".
Seven aircraft from a total of 11 starters were due in South Africa. | Support groups, and an Aberdeen woman whose life has been affected by suicide, are urging people not to try and cope alone over the festive period.
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British Olympic cyclist Becky James believes the team will miss former technical director Shane Sutton at the Games in Rio this summer.
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Vintage aeroplanes mostly dating from the 1920s and 1930s have finished a 13,000km (8,000 miles) rally flying from the Greek island of Crete to Cape Town in South Africa. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Lilly-May Page died after collapsing from an undiagnosed heart condition near Willow Bank School in Woodley, Berkshire, in 2014.
A paramedic decided not to use a defibrillator on the girl.
Cardiologist Dr Edmund Ladusans said she would have survived if she had been shocked.
Paramedic Shannon Jacobs, who was trained at Oxford Brookes University, said she was taught that shocking a patient with fine ventricular fibrillation, a condition where the heart quivers, "could do more harm than good".
Ms Jacobs has previously said her training was "inadequate".
Dr Ladusans said evidence of electrical activity picked up by a heart monitor should have resulted in a shock as there "was nothing to lose".
He added that text books differentiating between coarse and fine ventricular fibrillation caused confusion and needed to be clarified.
When asked by coroner Pete Bedford if Lilly-May would have survived if she had been shocked, Dr Ladusans replied "yes".
The hearing has been adjourned.
In March, nearly 130,000 people had been waiting for operations after being referred to a consultant, compared with 45,000 in March 2013.
But nine out of 10 patients were still treated within 18 weeks, data shows.
NHS England said it had cut the number of patients waiting more than a year for treatment.
A spokeswoman said: "The NHS has cut the number of patients waiting more than a year for treatment by nearly 13,000 over the past five years, and spending on non-urgent surgery is continuing to rise."
However, the surgeons said they were concerned that many more patients would wait longer for surgery in the future.
Earlier this year, NHS England boss Simon Stevens said growing pressures in the health service meant he could no longer guarantee treatment within the 18-week target time for operations such as knee and hip replacements.
The Royal College of Surgeons says this is resulting in more people waiting for six to nine months or more for surgery, in specialities such as ear, nose and throat, brain and spinal, and general surgery.
The biggest increases in waiting times have been in dermatology and gynaecology.
In March, in England, nearly 20,000 people had been waiting for more than nine months for surgery - three times more than in March 2013.
At that time, six-month waits were at their lowest level and 94% of people were treated within 18 weeks.
The average waiting time for planned surgery is now just over six weeks, with 90.3% or 3.3 million people treated in under 18 weeks.
Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have also seen increases in the numbers of people waiting more than six months for planned surgery since 2013, although the figures are not directly comparable because of the way they are measured.
NHS England did not respond directly to the six-month figures, but added: "While the Royal College of Surgeons understandably lobbies for more spending on surgeons, in the real world they aren't the only call on constrained NHS funding, which also has to support extra investment in GP services, modern cancer treatments, and expanded mental health services."
Clare Marx, president of the Royal College of Surgeons, said: "We are now struggling to meet the standards and timeliness of care that the public rightly expect.
"It is unacceptable for such a large number of patients to be waiting this long in pain and discomfort for treatment. This is the grim reality of the financial pressures facing the NHS."
She said many of those patients were older and waiting longer for surgery could have an impact on their quality of life and how well they recovered after surgery.
One major reason for the rise in waiting times was a shortage of beds in the NHS, she added.
"When pressures in emergency departments rise, patients awaiting planned surgery can have their operations cancelled or delayed until more space becomes available.
"In this election we urge all political parties to make timely access to surgery an urgent priority."
A Conservative spokesman said the figures failed to recognise the hard work of NHS staff.
"There were nearly 12 million NHS operations done last year, up by almost two million a year since 2010, at the same time as we've dramatically cut the number of people waiting over 52 weeks for treatment," he said.
Jonathan Ashworth, Labour's shadow health secretary, said: "The Tories' neglect and underfunding of the NHS has pushed services to the brink.
"By properly funding the NHS we will restore the 18-week treatment target which the Tories have abandoned and we will bring a million people off the waiting list." | A five-year-old girl who collapsed outside her school in 2014 could have been saved if she had been shocked with a defibrillator, an inquest has heard.
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The number of patients waiting six months or more for surgery has tripled over the past four years in England, the Royal College of Surgeons has said. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | David Walsh, 45, was found badly injured on Canon Cockin Street in Hendon just after 23:00 GMT on Friday, and died later in hospital.
Three men, aged 19, 36 and 40, have been remanded in custody charged with Mr Walsh's murder. They will appear before Newcastle Crown Court in the next 48 hours.
Three others arrested on suspicion of murder have been bailed, police said.
A fourth has been released with no further action.
An ambulance was called to Belmore Street in the town shortly before 19:00 GMT, following a report that a vehicle had crashed into the side of a shop.
The woman was taken to Enniskillen's South West Acute Hospital where she was described as being in a critical condition.
But Celtic Football Club declined its fans' ticket allocation amid security concerns.
"Shame for NI our fans can't watch us," reads the News Letter's front page.
Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers, from Carnlough, County Antrim, has described the absence of his club's supporters from the match as "a blow for Northern Ireland as a nation".
Mr Rodgers, who will be visiting Windsor Park for the first time since was a member of the Northern Ireland under-15 side which drew 0-0 against Brazil there in 1988, told the paper the absence of Celtic fans should have been avoided.
"I'm disappointed for our supporters of Northern Ireland, who travel over religiously every week and travel all over the world watching Celtic," he said. "There is now a game on their doorstep and they can't make it.
"I'm also disappointed for us as a nation. This is a different Northern Ireland. I know it's the marching season and all that sort of stuff, but this is a new Northern Ireland and should have been a place where the Celtic supporters could come in," he said.
Despite his disappointment, Mr Rodgers said it would be a proud moment for him to go back to Windsor Park with Celtic.
Inside, the paper reports that a council-backed fanzone for Celtic supporters missing out on the chance to be at the match has been provisionally approved for the car park of a Belfast bar.
"The Devenish bar complex car park at Finaghy Road North has been selected as the venue for a live screening of the match," it says.
"The bar is advertising that the facility will be open from midday, with the match being broadcast on the biggest screen in Ireland."
The News Letter reports that a council spokesperson declined to comment on how much money was involved.
In the Belfast Telegraph there's a heartbreaking account from a mother who has suffered the loss of two of her young sons.
"My year of hell on earth after losing a second son within a decade," reads the paper's headline.
Diane Adams, from County Down, told the paper she was left heartbroken for a second time in July last year when her son Jay 'Rossi' Reardon, was killed in a single-vehicle motorbike crash.
Ms Adams, who has three other daughters, also lost her teenage son, David Heaslip, who died of an aneurysm ten years earlier.
Now she and the rest of her son's family and friends are preparing to mark the anniversary of Mr Reardon's death with a 'cruise' from Bangor.
"It's left a big empty hole and the pain is unbelievable," Ms Adams said.
She described Jay as "a great people person" who achieved so much in his short life.
Elsewhere in the Belfast Telegraph is a story about the number of people taken to court for not having a TV licence.
The paper reports that on average it's about 19 people per day - but also reports that about a third of those are thrown out of court.
The report is based on figures from the court service.
In the Irish News, DUP MP Emma Little Pengelly has been responding to criticism of bonfires after effigies and flags were burned.
She defended what she called "public expression" and said: "Ultimately people here and across the UK and Republic of Ireland have the right to do it regardless of our like or disagreement with it."
The report says Mrs Little Pengelly later added: "For anyone trying to read any ambiguity into what I have said, let me be clear, all terrorism is wrong, that includes associated flags and emblems.
"Hate crime is wrong and there must be zero tolerance of it.
"All bonfires and cultural expression, should be done in a respectful way." | Three people have been charged with the murder of a man in Sunderland.
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A woman is critically ill after she was injured in a car crash in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.
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Friday sees Linfield take on Celtic at Windsor Park in their Champion's League qualifier. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Karl Harrison, 19, died on 20 June after being stabbed on Bradley Avenue, Lower Kersal.
Anton Farrell, 22, of Oaklands Road, Kersal and Jack Modlinsky, 20, of Marlborough Road, Cheetham Hill have both been accused of murder, Greater Manchester Police said.
They were remanded in custody and are due to appear later at Manchester and Salford City Magistrates' Court.
A 45-year-old man arrested for assisting an offender has been bailed.
Seven new licences have been granted for parts of Cornwall, Herefordshire, Devon, Gloucestershire, Somerset and Dorset.
Culling is part of the government's 25-year strategy to eradicate the disease, but opponents say there is no evidence culling is effective.
Almost 10,000 animals are due to be killed as part of this year's cull.
The cull has taken place in Somerset and Gloucestershire since 2013 and took place in Dorset for the first time last year.
Nearly 1,500 animals were culled last year in those three counties.
1,467
badgers culled in 2015
£1,779,000
total "badger control costs" for the year
£1,212.68 equivalent per badger culled
743 badgers culled by "controlled shooting"
724 badgers culled by cage trapping
Devon: Minimum 3,358, maximum 4,558
Cornwall: Minimum 2,173, maximum 2,950
Gloucestershire: Minimum 1,691, maximum 2,628
Dorset: Minimum 1,672, maximum 2,350
Herefordshire: Minimum 872, maximum 1,183
Somerset: Minimum 75, maximum 544
Source: Natural England
Farming minister George Eustice said: "Our comprehensive strategy to eradicate bovine TB in England is delivering results, with more than half the country on track to be free of the disease by the end of this Parliament.
"Bovine TB has a devastating impact on farms, which is why we are taking strong action to eradicate the disease, including tighter cattle controls, improved biosecurity and badger control measures in areas where the disease is rife."
Claire Bass, from the Humane Society International, said: "It is both shocking and sad that the government is expanding this cruel 'pilot' policy to three new counties.
"England's badgers are being needlessly killed as scapegoats, part of a 'smoke and mirrors' attempt to appease farmers and detract attention and resources away from an effective long-term solution to bovine TB."
The National Farmers Union welcomed the cull extension, saying that action was finally being taken. NFU president Meurig Raymond also indicated that the culls could be carried out across other areas of the UK.
"The number of areas that have expressed interest in carrying out badger controls in future years not only shows the sheer extent of the (bovine TB) problem, but the industry's continued commitment to playing its part in tackling this devastating disease," Mr Raymond said.
But Rosie Woodroffe from the Zoological Society of London said the new, higher targets would be "hugely costly for farmers and taxpayers" and there was no evidence to support them.
"The scale of the rollout is huge," Prof Woodroffe told BBC News. "Farmers will be required to kill almost 10,000 badgers at a minimum before the end of November - and yet the government has released no evidence that farmer-led culling is helping to control cattle TB.
"The number of badgers to be killed this year is greater than all the badgers killed in the entire proactive treatment of the RBCT [the badger culling trial].
"Since this is the fourth year of culling in the pilot areas, and benefits were expected to emerge after four years, I can't understand why the government didn't wait for the results of the pilots before rolling out culling on such a massive scale." | Two men have been charged with the murder of a man in Salford.
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Badger culling has been rolled out to more parts of England, in a bid to tackle bovine TB. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Daniel Lee Kelly, 37, from Grove Park, south London, admitted using the drone to send a psychoactive substance and tobacco into HMP Swaleside.
At Maidstone Crown Court he was sentenced to 14 months for two counts of sending prohibited items into the Eastchurch prison.
It is thought to be the first UK conviction of its type, according to Kent Police.
Kelly was arrested on 25 April after a vehicle was spotted by police in Leysdown with the lights on. A person then ran to the car and it sped off, police said.
A drone, which had been sprayed black and had black tape placed over its lights, was found in the boot.
Det Con Mark Silk, said: "Kelly's offending was serious. Psychoactive substances and tobacco have an inflated value in prison and this can lead to offences being committed within. This places both inmates and prison staff at risk."
Recent research by the Press Association found smuggling involving drones had risen from no incidents in 2013 to 33 in 2015.
Ingrid Edwards, 25, from Charlton, was cleared of the same charges.
Boston Dynamics, known for its robots such as Atlas and BigDog, has struggled to commercialise its inventions and was put up for sale more than a year ago.
Softbank also announced it is buying robotics group Schaft.
The terms of the deals were not disclosed. Softbank shares rose by more than 7% in Tokyo.
Softbank began as a Japanese telecoms company but moved into robotics and developed the human-like Pepper in 2014.
Founder Masayoshi Son has since built the Japanese firm into a massive technology conglomerate through some big deals.
They range from buying UK chip firm ARM Holdings for £24bn ($32bn), investing $1bn in satellite startup OneWeb, to setting up a venture fund with Saudi Arabia.
Mr Son is known to have an eye for potentially transformative industries and trends. He was an early investor in Alibaba and saw the potential in e-commerce many others did.
Police carried out a wave of arrests on Monday and Tuesday in and around Nice.
Bouhlel drove a lorry into a crowd celebrating Bastille Day on 14 July.
He was originally thought to have acted on his own, but prosecutors later said he had accomplices. Six suspects have already been placed under formal investigation as part of the inquiry.
The attack was claimed by jihadist group Islamic State (IS), and anti-terror prosecutor Francois Molins said it had been planned for months in advance.
The six initial suspects have been accused of providing Bouhlel either with a pistol or with logistical support.
The latest arrests involve French and Tunisian men, reports say.
Ceremonies were held on Monday to remember the 229 victims of jihadist attacks in France since the start of 2015.
Yasmine Bouzegan Marzouk, who lost three members of her family in the Nice attack, gave a passionate speech in Paris in which she said "these barbarians have no law, no faith, no religion".
A Muslim herself, Ms Marzouk told how her 13-year-old relative Mehdi Hachadi was killed under the wheels of Bouhlel's lorry.
"The life of a child who had such a promising future was snatched away. He was brought up in the Muslim faith, which says we should respect others and show tolerance," she said.
Bouhlel himself was eventually shot dead when police surrounded his 19-tonne lorry.
The two clubs agreed a fee between £6m and £7m, BBC Tees Sport understands.
Benin international Gestede joined Villa from Blackburn in July 2015 and has scored 10 goals in 55 appearances.
But the 28-year-old has started only three games since Steve Bruce took over at the Championship club in October and was left out of Villa's squad for Monday's 1-0 defeat at Cardiff City.
Gestede scored five goals as Villa were relegated from the top flight last season, having also had a brief spell in the Premier League with Cardiff in 2013-14.
Middlesbrough are currently 16th in the Premier League, four points above the relegation zone, and are the joint-lowest scorers this season - along with bottom side Hull - with 17 goals in 20 games. | A man has been jailed for using a drone to send banned items into a prison.
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Shares of Japan's Softbank have surged to their highest in nearly two decades after the firm bought robot-maker Boston Dynamics from Google's Alphabet.
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French police have reportedly detained eight men linked to lorry attacker Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, who murdered 86 people on the seafront at Nice.
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Middlesbrough have signed striker Rudy Gestede from Aston Villa on a contract until June 2020. |
Summarize the following piece. | Might sound like a weird question but the President of France, Francois Hollande, thinks that it should.
He's said he doesn't think its fair that some kids get help with their work at home, when lots of others don't.
So he wants to make the school day up to half an hour longer so that children can finish it there.
Do you think that you should get time in the school day to do your homework?
Do you think its fair that some kids get more help than others? Or do you think you spend enough time in the classroom already?
If you send us a comment, it may be published on the Newsround website, and some comments may be used in our TV bulletins. We'll use your first name and your home town to show that it's your comment; your personal details won't be used for anything else.
"I think it should stay the way it is. Making school 30 minutes longer is annoying when it gets dark so early and in some places it's not safe, also you can't go out with your friends after school and do fun stuff."
Ebony, Essex, England
"I think homework should be done at home, otherwise, why would it be called homework?! Teachers give homework just to see how much you know and how much you can do without them. You can show off to your parents how clever you are and you can teach your mum and dad how to do it!
Genevieve, Oxford, England
"What is the point of having HOMEwork if you don't do it at HOME?! I would rather just have no homework at all! We spend around 6-7 hours of the day at school and then when we have relaxation time the teachers just take it off us!"
Rachael, Warwickshire, England
"I definitely agree with the President of France. I go home every day with homework to do. Sometimes it can be easy but then there are some homework sheets that I don't 100% understand, and there is no one to help you that also 100% understands it."
Alfie, London, England
"I think homework should be done in school, because it gives you time to do whatever you like when you come home."
Lauren, Brighton
"HOMEWORK - the clue is in the name. It should be done at home, if you need help well that's what mums are for."
Kayleigh, Edinburgh, Scotland
"I think homework should be done at home because you learn more at home and I get home educated. Plus as well it is getting really dark and dangerous outside."
Georgina, Sunderland, England
"Most of the time I do it at school but if it is like revising, I do it at home."
Sophie, Huddersfield, England
"We should do our homework at home; it encourages us to work by ourselves, instead of being helped by a teacher. By working by yourself, you learn how to think independently. I enjoy learning so am really keen on homework!!!"
Ameerah, Glasgow, Scotland
"I think that homework should be done in school because at home you can cheat by using Google and this would not help you because in school you can't use Google to do all your work."
Sophie, Devon England
"Sometimes I work until late in the evening. It would be nice if I could finish it always at school, then I would have more time to do things I like!"
Danielle, Andijk, The Netherlands
"I think they should do homework in school but don't make the day longer. Make lessons short enough to be able to fit in an extra period for kids to do the homework.
Emily, Liverpool England
"I think that homework should be done at school if possible. My school has three fully-equipped computer suites, and we are allowed to do our homework at school.
Khawar, Buckinghamshire, England
"I think it should be done at school because not everyone has the right supplies to do the work at home."
Rachel, Scotland
"I think we should not get any homework at all as we spend most of our day at school doing work anyway and then we have to come home and do more work!"
Grace, Middlesex, England
"I think homework should be done at school - then you can get help from the teachers that set it and you won't get distracted by things like TV and the internet."
Abbie, London, England
"I think it would be great because I go to a welsh school and therefore my mum can't help me with my homework because she can't speak welsh."
Ellies, Newport, Wales
"At our school we have a homework club, so if children want to get their homework done at school, they can!"
Zara, Surrey, England
"I live in France and we already finish at 5.15pm and have loads of free periods, so to finish even later would just be stupid"
Alastair Dordogne, France
"I think that it's a great idea! Nobody could cheat by using google, I'd have more time to do what I like at home and I wouldn't forget to do my homework or leave my homework at home/school!"
Sade, London, England
"I don't think it would be a good idea because people who live far away will have to walk home in the dark sometimes."
Bailie, Bournemouth, England | Should homework be done in school time, rather than at home? |
Can you summarize this content? | Francis Santhio, 53, attacked 49-year-old Amelet Francis at her home in Toryglen, Glasgow, on 4 September.
The couple's eldest son discovered his mother's body and Santhio was later arrested after making a tearful confession to another of his children.
He faces a mandatory life sentence when he is sentenced at a later date.
The court heard that Sri-Lankan born Santhio and his wife had been married since 1989, but he later became estranged from his family.
He lived at a flat in the city's Govan area while his wife stayed in Toryglen with their three sons.
On the morning of the murder Santhio was seen approaching his wife at mass at a local church.
Later in the day, their eldest son got a call at work to say something had happened to his mother.
He immediately called her home and his father answered stating: "She can't speak - there has been an accident."
Their son rushed to the flat and discovered the door unlocked.
Describing the horror he eventually found in a bedroom, prosecutor Bruce Erroch said: "On looking through the door, he saw his mother on her back on the floor.
"She was covered in blood and suffering from an obvious head injury.
"He immediately thought she was dead and did not fully enter the room."
The son dialled 999, but paramedics could not save his mother.
After the killing, an emotional Santhio turned up at the school of one of his other sons.
He told him Amelet had fallen after he hit her and that she "could not get back up".
Santhio was soon detained by police near the scene.
On being told his wife was dead, he said: "She treated me like a slave. She retained my passport and kept my money."
The court also heard that, while on remand, Santhio called his daughter, who had not heard from him for two years.
He admitted he had got "angry" with Amelet and smacked her on the head with a weight.
Mr Erroch told the court Amelet suffered "multiple fractures to the skull" consistent with being hit with a "heavy object".
The court also heard Santhio had previous convictions including "instances of domestic abuse" towards his wife.
However, he has found himself being criticised this week for things he has said on social media.
But what did he say and why are people cross about it?
Since winning the election, Donald Trump has often used social media to tell people what he thinks.
One of the things that Donald Trump has tweeted about recently is to do with how he won the election.
He has disagreed with something that his own American spies have said.
The spies have said that Russia got involved with the US election to try to help Trump win.
They say Russia hacked into Hillary Clinton's team's emails and released embarrassing information about her.
However, Donald Trump has said on Twitter that he does not believe that the American spies have got it right.
Many people don't think that the way that Donald Trump has been sharing his opinions on social media is appropriate for a man who is about to become president.
Recently, his opponents have criticised him for not supporting the work of his own US spies.
The current vice-president of the US called Joe Biden - who is second in command to President Barack Obama - said in an interview that he needs to "grow up".
It is unusual for a US president to speak out in this way disagreeing with what his own spies are saying.
However, those who support him say it is a good thing that he is doing things differently to politicians in the past.
The Wales international forward, 27, has not played since tearing a calf muscle against Barcelona on 23 April.
La Liga title favourites Real face Juventus in the 3 June European final.
"We have to take it day by day but for now he's not with us and I don't know when he will be, but I hope it's soon," said Real boss Zinedine Zidane.
Real have three La Liga games remaining this season, starting with Sunday's home match with Sevilla (19:00 BST).
They are second to Barcelona - who visit Las Palmas at the same time - on the head-to-head rule, but have a game in hand. | A man who bludgeoned his estranged wife to death with a dumbbell after moaning she had been treating him "like a slave" has admitted murdering her.
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It's almost time for Donald Trump to officially become the president of the US.
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Real Madrid do not know when Gareth Bale will return from injury - with the Champions League final in his home city of Cardiff just three weeks away. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Here are eight reasons - eight being an auspicious number in China - why the world should pay attention to what happens in the secretive corridors of Beijing's Great Hall of the People.
It is now 35 years since former leader Deng Xiaoping's catchy slogan signalled China's opening to the world and ushered in one of the biggest economic success stories in human history.
Its economy has gone from being rather smaller than Italy's to the world's second largest, and is now home to one million US$ millionaires. By the time the new generation of leaders hands over power to the next in 2022, China could be challenging the US for top spot.
How China is ruled
This transformation has changed the way the world does business. Cheap Chinese labour has helped dampen prices in the West for everything from moccasins to mops to mobile phones. It is now the biggest investor in Africa, promising to shift the continent's focus away from Europe and the US for the first time in two centuries. And China is now the biggest foreign holder of US government debt - a threatening stick, or a foolhardy bet?
The key question now is whether the new leaders can keep the economy growing at the same rate as in the past, and help the rest of the world recover. Most Western analysts expect it to slow from 10% a year to a still impressive 6-7%, but argue that deep reforms are needed if China is to become a rich rather than middle-income country.
Growth should help create the world's biggest middle class, eager to enjoy creature comforts like cars and air conditioning, whatever the environmental cost.
China has been growing so fast it has scarcely stopped to consider the environmental cost.
The results are sobering. Rapid industrialisation and a building boom saw China overtake the US as the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases in 2007. Seven of the world's most polluted cities are in China. Each year it causes 500,000 to 750,000 premature deaths.
The damage is not just inside China. Airborne pollution including mercury and lead is carried across borders into neighbouring countries, and across the Pacific where it falls on the US West Coast.
China's leaders do now appear determined to clean up the worst excesses, but the scale of the task is daunting.
"If you look at the size of the economy and its population, these two factors alone show how complex it's going to be," says Edgar Cua of the Asian Development Bank.
It means China will be central to any future agreements on climate change. It has refused to limit its greenhouse gas emissions, preferring to cut "carbon intensity" - the carbon released per unit of economic output - by 40-45% by 2020. But with the economy growing so fast, and China relying on coal for up to 70% of its energy needs, greenhouse gas emissions will still rise by 60% from their present level, even if the carbon intensity target is met.
China has long fascinated the West, but its emergence as an economic power has seen a new burgeoning of interest in its culture and language.
Thirty years ago, only its inscrutable leaders were recognised in the West. Now people like actress Zhang Ziyi, basketball player Yao Ming and artist Zhang Xiaogang are global figures.
Meanwhile schools across Europe and the US are offering Mandarin classes to children as young as six, and during the Olympics, Chinese script could be seen on adverts on some London buses.
China's government has sought to capture the zeitgeist, helping set up several hundred Confucius Institutes around the world whose overt goal is teaching Chinese, but which also project soft power.
The number of Mandarin speakers is set to grow strongly, especially in Asia, but is it really able to challenge English as a global language? Not any time soon, most experts argue, pointing to its infuriating tones and a script which takes years to master.
China adopted the phrase "peaceful rise" to try and assure nervous neighbours that its new-found economic clout would not turn it into a bully.
But territorial disputes with Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam - and simmering tensions with the US - sometimes give the words a hollow ring.
China's People's Liberation Army is the world's largest, at three million strong, and its official budget is rising fast. Its first aircraft carrier has just gone into service and it is believed to be investing heavily in stealth technology, space warfare and cyber security.
These are natural developments for a country of its size and influence, China argues, and do not signal it has changed tack.
"Every country has to defend its security and territorial interests, but it doesn't mean we have to become aggressive, that way you can alienate even your friends," said Wu Jianmin, former ambassador to France.
But the real question is how China's new leaders pitch policy towards the US. They are younger and have more experience of the outside world, so can they set aside the entrenched suspicions among their rival militaries? History suggests the inevitable frictions between a superpower and its upstart challenger will lead to more tensions than detente.
China's Communist Party paints the century before it came to power in 1949 as one of humiliation by the West. So China's successful space programme is lauded as proof their country has regained its international standing.
But the huge cost is controversial given that 150m Chinese still live on $1 a day or less.
Having already sent an unmanned craft to orbit the moon, China has said it will send its first probe to land there in 2013. It has also spoken of preliminary plans to put humans on the moon, though no date has been set.
If the mission goes ahead, TV pictures beamed into the world's living rooms will also be flagging up China's challenge to the world's predominant space power, the US.
Newly-wealthy Chinese are blamed for fuelling the poaching of endangered species for use as aphrodisiacs, ornaments or to put in their soup.
Thousands of African elephants are killed each year for their ivory, which Chinese carvers prize, and China's government has been criticised for not properly policing its ivory trade.
The problem is that economic reforms which have lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty have also created voracious consumers.
Pork consumption gives a good idea of the impact. China now consumes five times more pork than in 1979, and is now home to 460m pigs, half the world's total.
But feeding them is impossible given the shortage of land. So farmers have resorted to importing up to 60% of the world's soyabean exports, pushing up prices for everyone else, and raising real fears over the industry's environmental impact.
In future, the pressures are likely to intensify as China seeks to feed 21% of the world's population with only 9% of its cultivated land. Some experts believe we will all have to get used to higher food prices, and to Chinese farmers buying up more and more overseas land.
As recently as 1995, applying for a passport to leave China was a six-month endurance test of bureaucracy, and most applicants were officials.
Now it can be done in a few days, and millions of Chinese are taking advantage of their government's new openness to travel overseas as tourists or students.
China's tourists are now the world's third biggest spenders, behind those from Germany and the US, and 70m Chinese travelled overseas in 2011, compared to 4.5m in 1995. Most stay close to home, in places like Hong Kong, Macau and Thailand. But increasing numbers are heading for the US or France, as well as less obvious destinations like Trier, the birthplace of Karl Marx. On Paris' Bateaux Mouches river cruises, as the sights are picked out in one language after another, Mandarin now comes ahead of Japanese.
Each year about 300,000 Chinese students are also heading abroad, especially to universities in the US and Australia. They want the kudos of a foreign education to get a better job when they return home. Some also see it as a way to dodge the exhausting entry test for China's own universities.
The wealth that has been created inside China has surged around the world.
Chinese demand has caused spikes in prices for commodities like copper - needed to cable up rapidly growing cities and infrastructure. It has reinvigorated Europe's luxury goods makers like Louis Vuitton and Hermes, whose products are de rigueur in China's status-obsessed and gift-giving culture. And it is transforming prestige wine sales - China now buys more Bordeaux than Germany.
Perhaps the most spectacular impact, some would call it a bubble, is on Chinese art. Three of the 10 most expensive paintings sold in 2011 were by Chinese artists, including the most expensive, a $57.2m work by Qi Baishi.
The next phase is likely to see China's industrial giants starting to look overseas for new markets and new expertise.
That will be controversial because most of them are controlled by the Communist Party. In areas like telecommunications and energy, they could threaten trade rows with the West. | China's ruling Communist Party meets from 8 November to rubber-stamp sweeping changes that will put in place the country's leaders for the next 10 years. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | Paul Cherrett, 62, who was an assistant district commissioner for the Scouts in Bournemouth, is accused of nine counts of indecent assault on a boy under the age of 16.
He is also charged with two counts of inciting a boy under the age of 14 to commit acts of gross indecency.
Mr Cherrett is due to appear at Bournemouth Crown Court on 20 January.
It is alleged the offences took place between 1979 and 2002 at Scout camp premises where Mr Cherrett worked and at other locations.
Dorset Police said Mr Cherrett joined the Scouting movement in 1972 when he became an assistant Cub Scout leader for the 21st Bournemouth Scout Group until 1977.
He then moved into the assistant district commissioner role for the Bournemouth West District until 1988.
He returned in the role of district Scout active support member at Butchers Coppice Camp site in 2010, the force said.
Det Con Jonathan McKinney, of Dorset Police's Child Abuse Investigation Team, said: "Following our investigation into the allegations, the Crown Prosecution Service directed Dorset Police to charge Paul Cherrett with these offences.
"Throughout this investigation the Scout Association has been fully informed and has been working with Dorset Police."
Police said the material was found when they searched the home of Micah Johnson in the Dallas suburb of Mesquite.
Five police officers were killed and seven wounded in a hail of gunfire during a protest against the shooting of black men by police.
Johnson died following a long stand-off with police in central Dallas.
Police confirmed media reports that the 25-year-old army veteran was the person killed when they remotely detonated explosives they sent into his hideaway near the scene of the shooting.
They said he had no criminal history.
Earlier, Police Chief David Brown said the suspect had told a negotiator that he had wanted to kill white people, especially white police officers, because he was angry about the recent shootings of black men by police.
Mr Brown added that the man had said he was not affiliated with any groups and he had acted alone.
US Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson appeared to confirm this in a statement later on Friday.
"At this time there appears to have been one gunman with no known links to or inspiration from any international terrorist organisation," he told a news conference in New York.
Edith Morley was appointed Professor of English Language at the University of Reading in 1908.
After a student-led campaign, the Humanities and Social Sciences Building has now been named the Edith Morley Building.
It was renamed after an annual lecture named in Prof Morley's honour.
The decision to rename the HumSS building - known as 'the maze' by students due to its complicated layout - was made thanks to a campaign by the Reading University Students' Union (RUSU) in 2015.
The University's Ethics Board "felt strongly that the change of name would serve as a fitting memorial to one of the university's most influential academics".
Prof Morley is believed to be the first woman appointed to a chair at a British university-level institution, after becoming English professor at University College Reading (now the University of Reading).
In her autobiography, she described the appointment as "my contribution to the battle for fair dealing for women in public and professional life".
Penny Mordaunt MP officially unveiled the renamed building after giving the annual Edith Morley Lecture, held annually to celebrate her achievements in the field.
The Portsmouth North MP said she was "very honoured" to help rename the building.
Who was Edith Morley? | A senior Dorset scout leader has been charged with sexual offences against seven boys.
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Bomb-making material, rifles, ammunition and combat journal have been found at the home of the main suspect in the Dallas shooting.
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Britain's first female professor has been honoured by her former university, by having a faculty named in her memory. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | His ministerial return, as secretary of state for the environment, food and rural affairs, has prompted a wave of claims that Mr Gove tried to remove the teaching of climate change when he was in charge of the education department.
"This is a man who tried to stop young people in our schools learning about climate change, who tried to take it out of the geography curriculum," said Caroline Lucas, co-leader of the Green Party.
On social media, these claims about climate change have been linked with pictures of Mr Gove's visit to the newly elected President Trump, as though their awkward thumbs up were evidence of some kind of global compact.
But is there any substance to the claims?
Anyone taking geography GCSEs or A-levels this summer will wonder what the row is about, because pupils will have been grilled - probably the wrong word - about climate change and global warming.
And there are plenty of references to climate change in the national curriculum for younger years.
But the row about "climate change denial" goes back to a controversial rewriting of the geography curriculum when Mr Gove was education secretary.
In a draft version, climate change was conspicuous by its absence, prompting a wave of petitions and lobbying demands for its re-inclusion.
And when the final version was produced, climate change had been reinstated.
But instead of ending the argument, there was still a lingering fog of claims about political attempts to stifle the subject.
And the Department for Education had to publish a statement denying that climate change had been removed.
But what really happened?
People who were close to Mr Gove during this time say that the climate change allegations have taken on a life of their own, a Westminster version of an urban myth, without any foundation.
They say it's a complete misreading of what happened - and that rather than downplaying the teaching of climate change, it was to be bolstered by moving it to science.
And in the end, after a consultation, Mr Gove took the decision to keep teaching it as part of geography.
Another source said that climate change ended up being taught in geography and in science, so it hadn't been cut - so it was a meaningless row.
But there are also different versions of events.
Another very senior figure, close to the curriculum reforms, said that shifting climate change into science might have been the "formal" argument.
But they suggest that there was also an "instinctive" distrust of the topic, with lessons about climate change seen as having an underlying, politically driven agenda.
This became a political "tussle", it's claimed.
Another person involved in the rewriting of the geography curriculum remembers ministerial interventions and political horse-trading.
They describe attempts not to "stress the human causes" of climate change as an attempt to placate the "right wing of the Conservative party".
This was the era of the coalition government - and it is claimed that the row was resolved behind the scenes after the intervention of the Department for Energy and Climate Change.
It was also suggested that "Nick Clegg was deployed" - as the deputy prime minister was sometimes involved with such departmental disagreements.
Although Mr Gove might have become the lightning rod in this row, it's worth noting that much of the controversial coverage about cutting climate change from geography was not about Mr Gove at all.
Tim Oates, who chaired the panel reviewing the national curriculum, argued it should be about core scientific knowledge, rather than issues, such as climate change, that might stem from that.
Such topics should be left to teachers to decide to teach rather than be prescribed, he said.
This had prompted reports that climate change "propaganda" was going to be dropped.
In a statement on Monday, Mr Oates said there had been "a lot of knee-jerk reaction and misunderstanding in media reports at the time".
"The debate the national curriculum panel had was not over whether children should understand climate science - I believe that they should.
"The debate was about what fundamental concepts they needed to learn at an early age in order to understand climate science."
"I am not a 'climate change denier' and I never have been," said Mr Oates.
There are other arguments underlying all this. Should ministers, political figures moving in and out of departments, really get involved in the detail of what pupils are taught? Or should this be the domain of subject specialists and education professionals?
And the school climate has changed too. Academies do not have to follow the national curriculum - so for most secondary schools, such requirements no longer even apply.
A spokesman for Mr Gove's new department, Defra, said: "The secretary of state wanted to enhance climate change in the national curriculum when he was education secretary. It was never his intention to remove it." | Did Michael Gove really try to stop schools in England from teaching about climate change in geography? |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Wallace, 27, the world number 242, shot a final round 69 at the Morgado Golf Resort to finish three shots clear of American Julian Suri.
He finished on 21-under-par and becomes only the second player on the tour this season to win from start to finish.
It was Wallace's fifth start on the European Tour having made the step up from the Alps Tour last year.
"It's the best feeling ever," he said after lifting the trophy. "It's always been a dream to win on the European Tour.
"Those first two days were really easy, that third day was the hardest day of my life and today was tough but it's so satisfying and I'm really happy."
Wallace shot 17 birdies on the first 36 holes and a level-par round on day three left him with a three-shot lead over German Sebastian Heisele going into the final day.
Wallace held off a surge from Suri on Sunday and becomes just the second winner since 2013 to card three bogey-free rounds on his way to victory.
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The Irish secured a 40-29 win over the three-time world champions in Saturday's Test match in Chicago.
It was their first victory over the All Blacks in 111 years of trying.
"It's been a long time coming and history has been made," said Best, who dedicated the win to ex-Ireland captain Anthony Foley, who died last month.
"You can see how good a side they are and how much it means to our boys."
Players formed a figure eight when facing New Zealand's Haka before kick-off, in tribute to the playing number of Munster head coach Foley, who died aged 42.
"It just felt like the right thing to do and it was our way, as an Irish national team, just to show a mark of respect to Axel [Foley] and his family," Best added.
Best, who joined Peter Stringer as Ireland's fifth most-capped player by making his 98th appearance, said he "couldn't be prouder" of the work his side had put in.
The world champions had been described as the greatest rugby team of all time, and brought an 18-match winning run into the game.
But tries from Jordi Murphy, CJ Stander and Conor Murray helped the Irish to a 25-8 half-time lead.
Simon Zebo scored his side's fourth try in the corner, before Robbie Henshaw powered over late on for Ireland's fifth try in front of a 62,300 crowd.
"We just talked about attacking New Zealand," Best told BT Sport 2.
"If you give them ball and stand off them they're an unbelievably dangerous outfit. It felt like a home game for us."
New Zealand boss Steve Hansen hailed Ireland's victory, which came at the 29th attempt, admitting the All Blacks had been fortunate to win 24-22 in Dublin in 2013.
"We've got to make sure the loss isn't wasted, we've got to make sure it takes us somewhere where we get better," he said.
Ireland play Canada in their second autumn international in Dublin on 12 November, followed by a rematch with the All Blacks at the Aviva Stadium a week later.
Former Ireland captain Keith Wood on BBC Radio 5 live
It was just phenomenal from the very start. The atmosphere inside the ground was just something incredibly special.
From the first second the game started, Ireland just attacked. They were not conservative - we all get frustrated when Ireland play conservatively - but they weren't even vaguely.
They were so accurate, so unbelievably aggressive, but everything stuck and they took every chance they got. | England's Matt Wallace led from start to finish to win the Portugal Open, his first European Tour title.
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Ireland captain Rory Best said his players were "absolutely ecstatic" after beating world champions New Zealand for the first time. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | The woman, in her 70s, was alone at her home in Poole, Dorset, when two men knocked on her door and forced their way in.
They tied her up with duct tape before stealing her belongings.
Dorset Police are trying to trace a dark-coloured VW Golf, following the raid in Egmont Road, Hamworthy, which happened on Monday night.
Det Sgt Neil Wright said: "This was obviously a frightening ordeal for the victim, who was thankfully not injured.
"I would like to trace the whereabouts of this specific VW Golf and am appealing for information."
Former Manchester City striker Edin Dzeko put Roma ahead, tapping home from Stephan El Shaarawy's pass.
Cesena - in the relegation zone in Serie B - equalised five minutes later through Luca Garritano.
But Totti, 40, scored with the last kick of the game in his 25th professional season at Roma.
Roma coach Luciano Spalletti said: "When Totti plays, even in training, he's the Muhammad Ali of football, always looking to land that knockout blow - to swing the punch no-one else can see.
"If he's on the pitch, it's a good idea to give him the ball. The more they get him on the ball, the more they'll get back in return - you get more back from Totti than the bank. He's the one who brought the fans back into the stadium from the car park last year."
The nine-time winners will face city rivals Lazio in the last four after they beat Inter Milan on Tuesday.
Felipe Anderson and Lucas Biglia scored in a 2-1 win at the San Siro.
Juventus play Napoli in the other semi-final.
They were finding it difficult to get homes and jobs, so they held protests.
The Loyalist community held their own protests in response.
Even before this, the different views of both sides of the community was a long-standing problem, so there was a lot for people to get annoyed about.
British troops were sent in to deal with the problem, but they soon came into conflict with an armed group who wanted a totally independent Ireland - the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
It led to armed Loyalist groups attacking the Catholic community.
From the 1970s to the 1990s, armed groups on both sides held violent campaigns.
The IRA carried out deadly bombings in Britain and Northern Ireland. Armed Loyalist groups responded by killing Catholics.
Thousands of people died. The conflict is known as the Troubles.
The 30-year-old has signed a three-year contract back with Blues, with the option of a one-year extension.
Gardner, part of the Blues team which won the 2011 League Cup, originally began his second spell back at St Andrew's in January.
So far, Gardner has scored twice in 20 games back at the Championship club.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. | An elderly woman was tied up with tape while burglars ransacked her home, in a "frightening ordeal", police said.
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Veteran captain Francesco Totti scored a 97th-minute penalty as Roma scraped past second-tier side Cesena to reach the Coppa Italia semi-final.
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After the island was split, there were fewer Catholics in Northern Ireland.
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Birmingham City have completed the re-signing of midfielder Craig Gardner from Premier League neighbours West Bromwich Albion for an undisclosed fee. |
Can you summarize this content? | Asda in Wrexham recorded the highest level of shoplifting of any store in Wales over the past three years with 350 offences, BBC Wales found.
The chain was the most hit by thieves in three Welsh police force areas.
Asda said it took such crimes seriously but shoplifters accounted for a tiny fraction of people visiting its stores.
The statistics compiled by BBC Wales found Asda came top in shoplifting crime in North Wales, Gwent and Dyfed-Powys Police force areas.
In the South Wales Police force area Boots stores in Swansea and Cardiff reported the most shoplifting.
The British Retail Consortium (BRC) says more than eight out of 10 adult shoplifters have a previous conviction which suggests that current sentencing has a "limited impact" in preventing re-offending.
The figures, obtained through Freedom of Information (FoI) requests, also show that in every area of Wales, food is the most shoplifted item.
Earlier this month, North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Winston Roddick said officers will start to give details of food banks to shoplifters because of concern about crime being committed to get drugs or food.
Shoplifting in north Wales has increased by 21.7% compared with last year, which Mr Roddick said accounted for 10% of all local crime.
The statistics on the worst-hit stores throughout Wales show:
In a statement, an Asda spokesperson said: "Our total customer numbers for the stores you list have been around the 10m mark so as you can see this is a minute fraction (around 0.005%) of the people who visited our stores during this period.
"That said we do take shoplifting very seriously and work with police and crime squads to bring this figure down even further and allow us to continue to offer the low prices that customers expect from Asda.
"That's probably one of the reasons why it looks like we have 'the most shoplifting offences' - we're just good at catching it and reporting it."
BBC Wales also asked two of the other chains for comment. Boots said it invests significantly in crime prevention and have a number of measures in place and Tesco said staff "work very closely with the local police" to prevent shoplifting.
According to the BRC, the direct cost was £511m in the years 2012-13 and the amount retailers spend on crime prevention measures is virtually the same.
It is calling for shoplifting to be "taken seriously within the criminal justice system", claiming half of all fines for shoplifting go unpaid so it wants sentences changed to act be a stronger deterrent.
According to its figures for 2012, 85% of adult shoplifters who were caught had a previous conviction, with 41% of them having 10 or more convictions.
Ben Whitfield set up Luke Maxwell to put Harriers ahead after three minutes before scorer turned provider, teeing up Harry White to double their lead.
Harriers old boy James Constable then scored twice in eight minutes, poking into the bottom corner before levelling from Luke Coulson's delivery.
But Arthur Gnahoua put Harriers back in front with a fine solo effort.
Harriers' second victory in four days lifts Colin Gordon's side above Torquay United on goal difference, but they are still 10 points from safety in the National League table.
Harriers boss Colin Gordon told BBC Hereford & Worcester:
"Nobody can doubt our spirit. Look at the honesty and the endeavour. The back four were throwing their bodies on the line for the team.
"We were playing against a very good team with an extremely good budget. They've got experience and took advantage of our naivety, causing us a lot of problems in the second half.
"But I was delighted with them, particularly in the first half. We started with a great intensity, passed the ball and played the game how I want to play it. I think the fans could see that. And what a brilliant goal to win a game." | Food is the biggest target for shoplifters according to figures which also reveal which stores are hit hardest.
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Kidderminster Harriers moved off the bottom of the National League table with a hard-fought win over Eastleigh. |
Summarize the following piece. | Windows were broken and the office at Bunscoil an tSléibhe Dhuibh in west Belfast was ransacked.
Between £5,000 and £10,000 of damage was caused to the school and its nursery unit. The break-ins had angered the community, said the school's principal.
"Neighbours had called in and texted their support," said Pilib Mistéil.
"Last night was different. People were coming in and saying: 'We need to catch these people, we need to bring them to justice.
"'We need to stop this immediately.'"
The school, in the Ballymurphy area of the city, has some 200 pupils. | An Irish language primary school is reviewing its security after three break-ins in the past four days. |
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Donnelly struck in the sixth minute, latching onto a George McMullan through ball to slot past keeper Elliot Morris.
Cliftonville, who had lost their last two, doubled their lead in the 57th minute when Daniel Hughes played in Garrett who chipped over Morris.
This defeat leaves Glentoran with only six points out of a possible 24.
Cliftonville leapfrog Glenavon in the league table but remain 10 points behind leaders Crusaders.
Reds manager Gerard Lyttle will be a happier man after his side's first league win at the Oval since 2011.
Lyttle had been critical of his players' workrate following their 3-1 home defeat at home to Coleraine on Saturday.
Donnelly's 15th goal of the season gave the League Cup winners the perfect start on six minutes.
Curtis Allen twice went close for Glentoran but they were hit by a second Cliftonville goal skilfully finished by Garrett.
Glentoran manager Alan Kernaghan: "We gave away an early goal but responded well and if it had not been for their goalkeeper we could have been 3-1 up at half-time.
"But in the second half we were spectators and were taught a real lesson.
"I cannot fathom the differences in our performances. It is frustrating because I know I have a good set of players here."
Cliftonville manager Gerard Lyttle: "The players' attitude was brilliant and I have to applaud them.
"We were disappointed with Saturday's performance and we wanted to show that we care." | Cliftonville moved back into third place in the Irish Premiership as goals from Jay Donnelly and Stephen Garrett sealed victory away to Glentoran. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | England defeated New Zealand by 87 runs in their second group game to book their last four spot on Wednesday, 14 June.
"England will be pleased to have sealed the win and a semi-final spot," said Morris.
"We look forward to hosting them and I know they are pleased to be returning."
England play their final pool match against Australia on Saturday at Edgbaston and will return to Cardiff next week regardless of the result in that match.
Eoin Morgan's team will face the runners-up in Pool B, which contains India, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Pakistan.
"It is a real boost and this is a ground England have done well on," said Morris.
"In the last 10 years, England have only lost two games of cricket in Cardiff.
"We have sold out the match and we are expecting a good atmosphere whoever they play.
"Cricket in India is a religion and everybody is fascinated by it.
"Whether it's India or South Africa or anyone else we will look forward to hosting them.
England posted 310 against New Zealand and looked under pressure when the Black Caps had captain Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor at the crease.
New Zealand were unsettled about the surface at Sophia Gardens, with a ball from Liam Plunkett leaping up and striking Taylor on the helmet before Williamson was dismissed for 87 with a rising delivery from Mark Wood.
Williamson claimed afterwards it was a difficult surface to bat on, but BBC cricket commentator Jonathan Agnew stated it was excellent England bowling and Morris agreed.
"I thought it played really well," said Morris.
"England got 310 and were probably hoping to get 330, which on any ground is a competitive total.
"When New Zealand were 158 for two ahead of the required rate and ahead of the Duckworth-Lewis [method], they probably thought they were on course for a victory.
"England will be pleased with the way they finished the game.
"They have played a lot of cricket here in recent years so they know the ground pretty well.
"We were pleased to get the game on and it was a good game of cricket.
"The rain the day before was torrential and the ground staff did magnificently well to make sure the pitch and outfield was in good condition to start on time and get a whole day's play in."
Morris said the semi-final is a sell-out and explained almost 14,000 tickets had been bought for England's victory over New Zealand.
"It was an interesting situation because we sold all the tickets bar 300 for the game," said Morris.
"A number of people might have looked at the weather forecast and decided not to have turned up.
"The bottom line is we sold 98 per cent of tickets for the game.
"It was a great atmosphere and environment and a good win for England."
Before next week's semi-final, Cardiff will host two more group games when New Zealand face Bangladesh on Friday, 9 June, and Pakistan and Sri Lanka play on Monday 12 June.
"They are two important games of cricket," said Morris.
"New Zealand can still qualify for the semi-finals and that will be a good game against Bangladesh on Friday.
"We are hosting Sri Lanka and Pakistan on Monday and it is always a good environment with their fans.
"It is great to be hosting a world tournament because you see the best cricketers on show." | Glamorgan chief executive Hugh Morris says he is happy England will return to Cardiff for the Champions Trophy semi-final next week. |
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Scotland's Hawkins, 25, missed out on the medals but put in an impressive performance with a personal best time of two hours 10.17 minutes.
Kenya's Geoffrey Kirui won gold with a season's best of 2:08:27.
Bahrain's Rose Chelimo won the women's race in 2:27:11, as two-time champion Kenya's Edna Kiplagat took silver.
She pipped the USA's Amy Cragg to the line, although they both finished in a time of 2:27:18. That was USA's first medal in the event since 1983.
Great Britain's Aly Dixon led the race up until the final nine miles when she was caught by the pack. The 38-year-old Sunderland runner eventually finished 18th in 2:31:36.
Windsor-born Charlotte Purdue, 26, was the best-placed Briton, coming home in 13th in 2:29:48.
"It was amazing," she told BBC Sport. "I was aiming for a top-20 finish. I knew I could do it.
"When I caught Aly, I gave her encouragement. There was also a British guy shouting at me, 'come on Aly Dixon' - he kept doing it. But apart from that, the crowd were great."
Earlier, Hawkins said he could have finished among the medals had he changed his tactics.
"It is bittersweet. I could just see third place in the distance," said Hawkins, who was ninth in the marathon at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
"The last five kilometres, I kept the same distance, which was quite frustrating. Maybe I left it a bit late.
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"I wanted to get a medal but fourth is still pretty good I guess. I was just hanging on towards the end.
"I'm still young. Hopefully, in the future I can get in the medals. Hopefully, I will push on in the Commonwealth Games and Tokyo 2020 after that."
Hawkins' performance equalled that of fellow Briton Peter Whitehead, who was fourth in the 1995 World Championships in Gothenburg.
Ethiopia's Tamirat Tola took silver in 2:09:49, two seconds in front of Tanzania's Alphonce Simbu.
Britain had two other runners in the race, with Andrew Davies 31st in 2:17:59 and Josh Griffiths 39th in 2:20:06.
Griffiths was the club runner who beat Britain's elite men in the London Marathon to qualify for the World Championships.
In the men's 400m hurdles heats, Britain's Jack Green hit a hurdle on the final bend.
However, despite finishing fifth and outside the top four automatic qualifying spots, he went through to Monday's semi-finals as a fastest loser.
"I was running really well. I was really pleased until I managed to wear one," said the 25-year-old.
Find out how to get into athletics with our special guide.
"I should've been in a position where I could have taken that on and won the race but that's the 400m hurdles for you. At least I am through so I have to make those changes for tomorrow."
He described it as his "worst race of the year", adding: "I will make sure tomorrow is much better."
Kyron McMaster, of the British Virgin Islands, was one of the favourites but the 20-year-old was disqualified for a lane infringement.
In the men's 110m hurdles, Andrew Pozzi was the only Briton from three athletes to reach the semi-finals on Sunday evening as David Omoregie and David King failed to progress.
Pozzi, who claimed the European Indoor 60m hurdles title in March, won his heat in 13.28 seconds in the same race as one of the main contenders, Jamaican Ronald Levy, failed to finish.
"I knew I got out very well so once I got to halfway it was about staying clean over the barriers and avoiding any big mistake," said Pozzi.
"Ronald is a big loss to the competition but I'm happy to make it through and make it to the semis tonight.
"I need a little bit faster to go into the final but I'm ready to do that."
Meanwhile, in the women's 400m heats, Zoey Clark was the only Briton to qualify for Monday's semi-finals as team-mates Emily Diamond and Anyika Onuora missed out.
Clark, 22, claimed the third of three automatic qualification spots from her heat with a time of 51.88.
Olympic gold medallist Shaunae Miller-Uibo, of the Bahamas, and world champion Allyson Felix, from America, each won their heats to ease through to progress.
Elsewhere, Britain's Zak Seddon, Ieuan Thomas and Rob Mullett failed to progress to the men's 3,000m steeplechase final on Tuesday. | Callum Hawkins equalled the best performance by a British athlete in the men's marathon at the World Championships by finishing fourth. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Mr Nkurunziza was playing in his daily kickabout with friends in the capital, Bujumbura.
In the latest unrest, a protester was shot dead in Bujumbura.
Last week, there was a failed coup against Mr Nkurunziza. Senior officials from both the army and police have been accused of involvement.
The protester was shot in the back by police in the opposition stronghold of Musaga, a witness said.
On Wednesday Mr Nkurunziza said in a speech on state radio that an insignificant part of the capital was experiencing unrest while the rest of Burundi was peaceful.
He urged those who have fled the country to return.
The UN refugee agency says that more than 105,000 people have fled Burundi into neighbouring countries since the conflict started.
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Mr Nkurunziza also announced a 10-day delay for parliamentary elections, which were due to be held next Tuesday.
He made the decision after a recommendation from the electoral commission, a spokesman said. The African Union and the EU had called for a postponement saying there should be dialogue to ease the tension.
The presidential election is due in June.
Mr Nkurunziza's critics say the third term contravenes the constitution, which requires him to step down after two terms.
Burundi's Constitutional Court says that Mr Nkurunziza's first term does not count because he was elected by parliament and not voters.
10.4m population
50 years - life expectancy for a man
2nd poorest country in the world
85% are Hutu, 14% Tutsi
300,000 died in civil war | Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza has been photographed playing football as protests continue over his bid to run for a third term in office. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Mr Dewani is accused of organising the killing of his wife Anni while on honeymoon in South Africa in 2010.
Defence lawyers claimed taxi driver Zola Tongo, who is serving 18 years for her murder, was an unreliable witness.
But state lawyers said Tongo's financial difficulties led him to take part in the murder plot.
Tongo, prosecutors allege, was paid 15,000 rand (about £1,000) to organise the murder of Mrs Dewani.
Mr Dewani, a care home owner from Westbury-on-Trym near Bristol, who was extradited from the UK after a lengthy Home Office battle, claims the couple were hijacked while Tongo drove them through the Gugulethu township in his taxi on 13 November 2010.
He was released unharmed but his wife was driven away. Her body was found in the abandoned taxi in Khayelitsha the next morning. She had been shot.
The state alleges that Mr Dewani conspired with others to stage the hijacking.
Mr Dewani maintains the money was actually for a surprise helicopter trip which Tongo was helping to arrange.
Prosecutors have submitted a 62-page report following a defence bid to have the case thrown out.
Tongo was jailed alongside Mziwamadoda Qwabe, who was sentenced to 25 years for his part in the murder.
Xolile Mngeni, who was convicted of firing the shot which killed Mrs Dewani, was sentenced to life in prison and died in jail.
Prosecution lawyer Adrian Mopp said the group were "not the A Team of contractors" and said they could "barely organise transport".
"They are not sleek operators at all," Mr Mopp said.
But he defended Tongo's evidence saying the timings of the plot were "very clear".
Mr Mopp added: "We are dealing with an amateurish attempt. If it was not for the fact the deceased was killed it would have been comical how this act was put together and executed."
The state's submission to the court concludes that "contradictions and discrepancies" in Tongo's evidence "may flow from natural defects of observation" and "mistakes of memory".
But Tongo "never strayed from the crux of his evidence" about the murder plot.
Judge Jeanette Traverso said she would make a decision on the case next Monday.
Chihuahua-cross Cherry, five, went missing on a walk and was found after a thermal imaging camera scanned the area above Cwmtillery, Blaenau Gwent.
Her owners enlisted the help of Cwmbran-based aviation firm Resource Group to look for their missing pet.
The thermal imagining camera detected Cherry and an old mining tunnel was used to rescue her.
She had gone missing at about 18:00 GMT on Wednesday 15 March while chasing sticks on a walk at Cwmtillery Lakes.
Staff from Resource Group joined teams from the RSPCA, Gwent Police and South Wales Fire and Rescue Service.
Using the drones, they were able to locate Cherry on Monday and the rescuers dug through an old mining tunnel to get to her.
Patch, trained by Todd Pletcher, had his left eye removed because of inflammation last year.
However, he finished runner-up in April's Louisiana Derby - his first graded stakes - after competing in his first race in January.
"It seems to never faze him - he's a remarkable horse to recover as quickly as he did," said Pletcher.
Patch is a 40-1 shot for the $2m (£1.55m) Kentucky Derby in Louisville, the first leg of America's Triple Crown.
"It's a credit to him and his professionalism that he was able to adapt so seamlessly," Pletcher added.
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Oxford boss Appleton has been linked with a move to Premier League club Leicester City to become assistant manager to Craig Shakespeare.
Thistle had accepted a bid worth an initial £300,000 for the centre-back.
But Lindsay, 21, is reluctant to move to the League One club if a change of manager is imminent.
The defender is content to stay with the Jags for now, for whom he scored seven goals in 42 appearances last season. | A judge is considering whether a case against UK businessman Shrien Dewani, accused of the murder of his wife, should continue.
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A dog trapped down a mountain hole after being missing five days was rescued following a drone search.
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A one-eyed horse called Patch has been entered into the Kentucky Derby, America's biggest race, on Saturday.
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Partick Thistle defender Liam Lindsay has opted not to join Oxford United because of uncertainty over Michael Appleton's future. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | President Alexander Lukashenko hosted the talks in Minsk, which resulted in a new ceasefire deal on Thursday. Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany took part.
"They ate omelettes, cheese, dairy produce, drank several buckets of coffee," he was quoted as saying.
"My job was to provide the ammunition on time," he said jokingly.
He added that it was Belarusian and Russian produce that the leaders consumed.
Russia has blocked imports of EU food and drink, in retaliation for Western sanctions imposed over Russia's role in the Ukraine conflict.
The expert advisers at the talks "slept in shifts - in order to keep clear heads", Mr Lukashenko told the Belarus news agency Belta.
The Minsk talks brought together Russian President Vladimir Putin, French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.
Mr Lukashenko rules in authoritarian style, cracking down on dissent and maintaining state control over key economic sectors.
Sometimes dubbed "Europe's last dictator", he has ruled Belarus - a former Soviet republic - with an iron fist since 1994.
Police were called at about 02:00 BST to Old Kent Road to reports of a disturbance.
The victim was found with stab injuries and pronounced dead at the scene about an hour later.
Three men, aged between 21 and 23, and two women, both 25, have been arrested on suspicion of murder.
Officers believe they know the identity of the deceased but await formal identification and confirmation. Next of kin have been informed.
The council has cited "unprecedented cuts in government funding" and rising levels of demand for services by the over-65s and children's sectors.
Since 2011 the council has axed some 600 roles.
The proposals will be considered at a committee meeting on 18 July. The council said there could be even further cuts because of Brexit.
Labour council leader Jo Lovelock said: "Whilst no-one can know for sure what the effect of the recent EU vote will be, further cuts in local government funding are possible.
"We do know that over the next four years the government will further reduce the revenue support grant income Reading receives by 92%.
"Unfortunately, savings proposals such as these are a direct consequence."
Losing 200 members of staff - not including teachers and other employees who work in education - would mean a 10% reduction in the council's 2,000-strong workforce.
Ms Lovelock said: "Things are going to take longer, some things won't happen at all and people will notice that the council can't be as proactive as it has been."
About £5.9m is planned to go from children's, education and early help services.
The council will need to save about £36.7m by 2020 due to a funding gap from central government.
Ms Lovelock added: "These are the latest in a long line of savings we are having to consider following the unprecedented cuts in government funding.
"We have a legal duty to deliver a balanced budget."
The council says the population has increased to 159,200 - about 9% - since 2001 and there has been an increase of so-called heavy service users like the over-65s and children.
The cuts were announced at a meeting on Friday, where the council also released proposals to "save all libraries" from closure by reducing their opening hours.
Weekly opening hours at the eight libraries will be reduced by between five and 15 hours.
Some, including Whitley and Southcote libraries, could be moved to neighbouring community centres in a measure that could save about £290,000. | "Buckets" of coffee and local dairy produce kept the leaders going during their all-night Ukraine peace talks, the Belarus leader has said.
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Five people have been arrested after a 19-year-old was stabbed to death in south-east London.
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About 200 jobs could go at Reading Borough Council as the authority makes plans to save nearly £20m. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The Cookstown-based group has a strong specialism in hotel development.
It said it handed over "nine high-profile construction projects" during the time covered by its latest figures.
A note in its accounts said that it now has "minimal reliance" on bank funding for working capital and expects to have repaid all bank loans by September.
It has recently sold a portfolio of four Jurys hotels in England for a reported £80m.
The accounts stated that the group has bank loans of £17.5m, with funders including Ulster Bank and Cerberus, the US investment fund.
They added that "hugely positive progress" has been made with all funders.
The firm is currently working on a new office block for Belfast City Council and is also planning two major student accommodation schemes in the city.
It also recently won three major contracts in England, including a 380-bed Hub by Premier Inn hotel to be built at King's Cross in London. | The construction and property group McAleer and Rushe made a pre-tax profit of £1.7m in the 18 months to September 2014. |
Summarize the provided section. | With their place in France already confirmed, Wales rounded off the campaign with a 2-0 win over Andorra.
Fittingly it was two of their brightest stars, Aaron Ramsey and Gareth Bale, who scored against the Group B minnows.
"The team were labelled the 'golden generation' before they'd earned it. Now they've earned it," said Coleman.
"They deserve it. You get team spirit from working hard for each other on the pitch and coming through tough situations and big challenges, and they've done it time after time."
Despite a 2-0 loss in Bosnia-Herzegovina on Saturday, Wales' place at Euro 2016 was confirmed that night when Cyprus beat Israel.
Cardiff City Stadium had seen 34,000 supporters packed inside on Tuesday to cheer the players who have delivered Wales' first appearance at a major finals since the 1958 World Cup.
And Coleman was quick to praise the fans, who he said have played their part in his side's success.
"These supporters have been absolutely incredible, I've never seen anything like it," added the Wales boss.
"In some games we've struggled a little bit, we've hung on, and these guys have got us over the line - I'm so happy for them."
While the likes of Real Madrid forward Bale and Arsenal midfielder Ramsey more often attract the headlines, Coleman picked out captain Ashley Williams for his contribution from centre-back.
"He's been brilliant on and off the pitch, a true leader and I think you need that if you're going to be successful," he added.
"When we've really needed him, especially in the big games where we've been under the cosh, he's come up trumps for us.
"He's fantastic and he deserves everything that's coming to him."
Bale's late strike to put some gloss on the scoreline against Andorra was his seventh goal of a campaign that began with his brace away to the same opposition in September 2014.
"We've put the hard work in for years and years," Bale told Sky Sports. "It's time to enjoy it, but as soon as France comes round we'll be looking to make an impact.
"It's something special. The fans, what can I say? We have the best fans in the world. Obviously a great thanks to the gaffer and everybody involved. We're looking forward to the future."
Swansea defender Williams added: "It's overwhelming. We wanted to get to this game so we could say thank you to the fans for all the support they gave us over the campaign.
"It was a nice game to play as the last one. We'll enjoy the celebrations."
The father of the late Gary Speed, Roger, paid tribute to his son, who managed Wales before Coleman.
"I was in tears for the last match in Cardiff when the Barry Horns - the group - started singing Gary's favourite song Can't Take My Eyes Off You. I just broke down," he said.
"I watched the Bosnia game with a mate where we live and really, really enjoyed it and couldn't believe it when the score came through from the other match [Israel 1-2 Cyprus] - fantastic!
"Everybody should be backing Chris Coleman, he's done a great job. Gary was doing well, Chris carried it on." | Wales manager Chris Coleman said his players are now worthy of being described as a "golden generation" after qualifying for Euro 2016. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | Mr McGurk was hit on the Mullydoo Road, close to the Greencastle Road junction, at about 15:00 GMT.
Police have appealed for witnesses to the accident to contact them
A footbridge over the motorway near Maidstone in Kent was hit by a lorry carrying a digger last weekend.
Work started on the removal operation on Friday night and is expected to be complete by 06:00 BST on Monday.
Travellers have been warned about delays on Kent's roads while a large part of the M20 is closed for the work on Saturday and Sunday.
Catherine Brookes, chief highways engineer at Highways England, said she was confident it would be cleared before Monday's rush hour.
She told BBC Radio Kent: "We are ahead of schedule already, everything is going to plan. The diversions we have put in place seem to coping quite well.
"We have got about 100 people working around the clock this weekend to make sure we have safely removed the remaining section of the footbridge. So far we are doing well."
The M20 was set to be closed between junctions 1 and 4 coast-bound and junctions 4 and 2 London-bound from Friday evening until 06:00 BST on Monday.
The collapsed section of the pedestrian bridge, near the village of Addington, was removed from the scene last weekend, and the road was reopened a day later.
The M20 is the main route to the Channel Tunnel and Port of Dover. | The man in his 70s who died after being struck by a car in County Tyrone on Thursday afternoon was Francis McGurk, who was from Greencastle.
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Good progress has been made in removing the remains of a bridge that collapsed on the M20, the BBC has been told. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | A new powerful combined scanner is being used to detect a build-up of abnormal proteins.
The experts said it may give a clearer understanding of what causes conditions such as strokes and dementia.
The new scanner combines MRI imaging which gives structural details of the brain with PET scanning that looks at brain activity.
It allows the researchers to build up an accurate picture of the brain in a living person in real time.
The scientists from the centre for clinical brain sciences are using data from stroke patients to investigate the build-up of an abnormal protein called amyloid.
They want to understand how it can trigger bleeding and stroke, and in some cases cause dementia.
The scanner will also be used to collect data for dementia patients as part of a huge UK-wide study.
Dr Mark Rodrigues, ECAT clinical lecturer at the university's centre for clinical brain sciences, said: "The MR-PET scanner will transform our ability to detect changes in the brain that occur after stroke.
"We hope that the findings will help us to improve diagnosis and ultimately find new ways of treating the condition." | Stroke patients are helping scientists at Edinburgh University understand what might cause bleeding in the brain. |
Write a summary of this document. | Amber Peat was last seen at home in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire on Saturday.
Formal identification has yet to take place but police said they were not treating the death as suspicious.
The body was found on Tuesday evening near a path close to houses in Westfield Lane about a mile from Amber's home. Police at the scene said the area had been searched earlier.
Her family have been informed and have asked for privacy.
Police thanked all who had helped in the search, particularly the Mansfield community.
Some residents expressed surprise the discovery of the body, between two busy roads, had not been made earlier.
Yolanda Cassidy, who lives next to the site, said: "It is a very public area. I wondered if she had climbed over gates [into a nearby property] but they have dogs so I can't imagine she would be in there.
"I went shopping on Monday and walked across there. People are back and forth, it's nearly a main road, people go up and down. I can't believe she's been there since Saturday."
Police officers have also informally confirmed they had searched the area since Amber went missing.
A post-mortem examination is due to be carried out later.
On Tuesday morning, Amber's mother and stepfather said her disappearance was "completely out of character".
Kelly and Danny Peat, who had just returned from holiday with Amber, confirmed she had left her home in Bosworth Street without her mobile phone or any money.
They had issued an emotional plea for her to return, breaking down in tears as they spoke at a police news conference.
Mr Peat said: "We had just all had a brilliant holiday. It's just not right.
"We told her to clean a cool box out that we had had sandwiches in for the journey home.
"It was a chore, basically, and I'm sure all teenagers are the same, she didn't want to do a chore. That was the last conversation."
Ms Peat said: "We were in the living room and I heard the front door slam."
"I heard the door and when I went out I couldn't see her anywhere. She had just gone."
Up to 300 people were involved in searches on Monday and Tuesday, with posters being placed in many houses and shops.
Supt Matthew McFarlane, of Nottinghamshire Police, said she had been "out of the house perhaps for a few hours" prior to going missing.
Liam McMeechan, 23, left Tahir Ahmed with a fractured skull following the raid at A&A newsagents in South Trinity Road on 12 August 2016.
Mr Ahmed, who feared he was going to die, had tried to fight off McMeechan.
Earlier, McMeechan pleaded guilty to assaulting the shopkeeper to his severe injury and permanent disfigurement.
Accomplice David Allan, 50, admitted to a charge of attempted robbery and was jailed for 32 months at the High Court in Glasgow.
Lord Boyd jailed McMeechan for seven years - but he must first serve 414 days from a previous sentence.
The judge said McMeechan, who has a string of robbery convictions, was a "considerable menace".
McMeechan will also be supervised for two years on his release.
Mr Ahmed needed 14 staples for serious head wounds and has been left scarred for life. | A body has been found by police searching for a 13-year-old girl who had been missing for nearly three days.
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A thief who hacked at a shopkeeper's head with a machete during a robbery bid at an Edinburgh shop has been jailed for seven years. |
Summarize the following piece. | Police say the majority of issues were reported on Tuesday in the centre of Lowestoft, including around Whapload Road and Battery Green Road.
Devices can be bought which block signals for remote central locking, leaving a vehicle unlocked.
Suffolk Police said the source of the problem "had not yet been identified".
A spokesman said: "Owners of various makes of vehicle have reported experiencing problems, which include either being unable to lock their vehicles remotely and secure vehicles becoming unlocked."
The force advised people to manually lock their vehicles.
Michael Hollidge, who works nearby, said he regularly checked on his parked car since experiencing the problem.
"It's locking one minute, then it's not the next," he said.
"I try it with my key and the key's not working.
"I don't know what it is."
Driver Duncan Cole said he feared his insurance would not be valid if his car was unlocked at the pay-and-display car park, and so decided to return home.
Ofcom, the government agency with responsibility for radio communications, said it was keen to receive complaints about problems with electronic key fobs, which it could then investigate, but had so far received no complaints.
Similar issues in Southampton were found to be due to interference from a resident's faulty device which transmits a TV signal to other sets in the home.
BBC reporter Kim Riley visited a car park in Whapload Road earlier on Wednesday and said he was "rather sceptical" that there was any truth to the reports.
"Then something rather strange started happening," he said. "The key was still in the ignition and suddenly the car started to lock itself, and a few seconds later the alarm triggered.
"There is something in this.
"Police are taking a keen interest, and indeed officers came over to speak to us after a member of the public reported someone looking suspicious, sitting in a car, tapping away on a laptop.
"Fortunately I was able to do some smooth talking and satisfy them that it was only cameraman Shaun Whitmore, busy editing my report for tonight's BBC Look East." | About 50 drivers have reported being unable to remotely lock their cars, possibly due to someone using a signal jammer in part of Suffolk. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | The New York Times said a "shadow campaign" had been set up by some Republicans on the assumption Donald Trump would not stand again.
Citing multiple sources, the article said Mr Pence had implied that he would plan to run if Mr Trump did not.
Mr Pence said the report was an attempt to divide the administration.
The Times story said the turmoil around the White House, including investigations into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia during last year's election, had prompted some Republicans to take steps "unheard-of so soon into a new administration".
Mr Pence, it said, had created an "independent power base" and set up a political fund-raising group.
In a statement, Mr Pence said: "The allegations in this article are categorically false.
"Whatever fake news may come our way, my entire team will continue to focus all our efforts to advance the president's agenda and see him re-elected in 2020. Any suggestion otherwise is both laughable and absurd."
Senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway also dismissed the report as "complete fiction".
"It's absolutely true the vice president is getting ready for 2020 - for re-election as vice-president," she told ABC's This Week.
A New York Times spokeswoman stood by the article, saying: "We are confident in the accuracy of our reporting and will let the story speak for itself." | US Vice-President Mike Pence has dismissed as "disgraceful and offensive" a report suggesting he is preparing a run for president in 2020. |
Can you summarize the following information? | An extensive search operation was launched for Mr Davidson, 73, from Dalkeith, when he was reported missing on 26 April.
His body was found by a member of the public in the River North Esk, near Dalkeith, three days later.
Police said there were no suspicious circumstances.
In a statement, his family said: "We wish to thank the local community and police for their understanding and support at this very sad time."
Sgt Stuart Aitchison, of Police Scotland, said: "Our sympathies are with the family of Thomas Davidson and we wish to extend our gratitude to them for their assistance over the course of our search operation."
Two of the alleged cases happened in 1979. Details of the others are not clear yet.
People who say they suffered abuse have come forward since a health service report in abuse at Lissue House and Forster Green was leaked to the Irish News in October.
The Stinson Report contained allegations of abuse at the hospitals in the 1980s and 1990s.
The report was completed in 2009 but was never published.
It dealt with allegations that children suffered physical, emotional and sexual abuse.
The review was instigated by the Belfast Trust and the Eastern Health Board after one former patient made a complaint to police.
The Belfast Health Trust said it reported allegations to the Eastern Board and to the Department of Health.
In October, Health Minister Edwin Poots told the assembly that there had been no cover-up into allegations of abuse at the two hospitals.
Mr Poots said that the Stinson report indicated that the regime was harsh and and a small number of staff may have committed acts of abuse.
He also said he was "extremely annoyed" that he was not given an interim briefing on the allegations at the hospitals.
In relation to the two allegations of abuse in 1979, Belfast Trust said it was unable to comment on staff issues from that period as it did not manage Lissue Hospital at that time.
Edinho, whose full name is Edson Cholbi Nascimento, was detained in his home in the city of Santos on Tuesday.
He was sentenced to 33 years in prison in May for laundering money raised from drug trafficking, but was allowed to remain free pending his appeal.
Police said his arrest was to prevent him from fleeing the country after he had failed to hand over his passport to the authorities as requested.
Edinho, who is Pele's third son from his first marriage, said he had lost the document.
Police said the 43-year-old, who used to play as a goalkeeper for his father's former club, Santos, did not offer any resistance when he was taken into custody.
Edinho was found guilty of having links with a notorious drug gang in the city of Santos, in Sao Paulo state.
While he admitted buying drugs from the gang, he denied working with them.
His lawyer, Sidney Goncalves, said he would ask for his client to be released. "News of his arrest came as a surprise," Mr Goncalves said.
Mr Goncalves said keeping Edinho in custody was "unnecessary" as his passport had been cancelled and his client therefore had no way of leaving the country.
Edinho's father, Pele, is widely acknowledged to be the greatest footballer of his generation, winning the World Cup with the Brazilian national squad in 1958, 1962 and 1970. | Police have confirmed the body of a man recovered from a river in Midlothian is missing pensioner Thomas Davidson.
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Police are believed to be investigating five cases of alleged abuse at two hospitals, the BBC has learned.
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Police in Brazil have arrested the son of football legend Pele. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | He is approaching the end of his 10th year in charge and thinks it is the right time to seek a fresh challenge.
Cricket Scotland chairman Keith Oliver said: "There is no doubt that the governing body of cricket in Scotland is unrecognisable from where we were in 2004.
"And the credit for this must go to Roddy and his staff."
During Smith's time as chief executive, his management team have increased from eight to 25 and turnover has quadrupled.
I am delighted that I leave an organisation in good health with a growing game and after a year of exceptional on-field performances by national teams at all levels
Cricket Scotland reported a rise in participation figures for players, coaches and umpires during those 10 years.
And the national side have secured a place at next year's World Cup finals in Australia and New Zealand by beating Kenya in a qualifying event.
Oliver, who has worked with Smith during that whole period, said: "Back then, we could not have imagined we would have won global qualifying events, played in world cups at youth and senior level, played One Day International games in front of thousands, run a fully professional national team as well as winning numerous development awards at a European and Global level.
"I and all at Cricket Scotland wish Roddy every success in his next role."
Cricket Scotland will start the recruitment process to find Smith's successor with the aim of having a replacement in place early in the new year.
Smith said: ''I have thoroughly enjoyed my time with Cricket Scotland and it's hard to believe it has been nearly a decade.
"I am delighted that I leave an organisation in good health with a growing game and after a year of exceptional on-field performances by national teams at all levels.
"Ten years is a long time for a chief executive of a national governing body and now feels exactly the right time to move on to my next challenge.
"With a Cricket World Cup to look forward to early next year and a number of newly-appointed quality staff to work with, I am looking forward to handing over to my successor an organisation that is very well placed to succeed in the future."
Cricket Scotland announced in June that it plans a new "world class" base in Stirling, relocating from Edinburgh, with a new pavilion at the home of Stirling County Cricket Club designed to host international matches. | Cricket Scotland chief executive Roddy Smith has announced that he will leave the role at the end of December. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Spider-Man: Homecoming raked in $117m (£91m) in its opening weekend, topping industry estimates of $80-$110m.
Sony Pictures, which owns the film rights to the Marvel comic character, said the figure was the second largest in its history, behind Spider-Man 3.
It comes amid a slow summer at the US box office where takings are down 8%.
In Homecoming, Spider-Man's alter ego Peter Parker, played by British actor Tom Holland, has to juggle his high school responsibilities with his secret life as a masked vigilante.
He soon encounters Adrian Toomes, a villainous arms dealer played by Michael Keaton, who has his own alter-ego in the form of wing-sporting marauder Vulture.
The film cost $175m to produce and has already grossed $250m in global sales, according to online database boxofficemojo.com.
Much attention has been paid its successful marketing campaign, which heavily featured the superhero Iron Man, played by Robert Downey Jr, who serves as Spider-Man's mentor in the film.
That followed a 2015 deal between Sony and Walt Disney which allowed the web-slinger to appear alongside fellow Marvel Comics characters on screen.
Tom Holland is the third actor to play Spider-Man in 15 years, following Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire.
The film's success comes despite a slow summer at the North American box office which impacted previously reliable franchises such as Transformers and Despicable Me.
Overall, summer box office takings stand at around $2.3bn, 8% lower than last year.
However, year-to-date takings are on a par with 2016, after movies such as Beauty and the Beast and The Fate of the Furious did well in the first half of 2017.
Speaking on stage at Techonomy, a technology conference in California, Mr Zuckerberg said Facebook should not be held responsible.
"The idea that fake news on Facebook influenced the election in any way is a pretty crazy idea," he said.
"If you believe that then I don't think you have internalised the message Trump supporters are trying to send in this election."
Some data has shown that fake stories were being far more widely shared on the platform than follow up stories debunking the claims.
Can social media predict election results?
For an increasing number of people, particularly Americans, Facebook is becoming the primary source of news coverage.
The site's News Feed is specifically designed to show users content it thinks will be of most interest, creating what some describe as a "filter bubble" that reinforces a person's view without injecting differences in opinion.
Earlier this year, Facebook was accused of being anti-Trump after it was alleged its human moderators were favouring liberal stories appearing in people's "trending stories" box.
While denying that claim, the site did sack its human team, instead relying solely on an algorithm to determine which stories were shown to be most popular.
As a consequence, stories which were later proved entirely false appeared on the timelines of a large number of users.
When asked about checks and balances needed to keep a company like Facebook in line, Mr Zuckerberg said it was about "listening to what people want".
"My goal, and what I care about, is giving people the power to share so we can make the world more open and connected. That requires building a good version of News Feed. We still have work to do on that. We’re going to keep improving it.
"On the community guidelines, I think as norms change and people want to see more news, I think we'll have to continue to evolve the guidelines to reflect the value that the community holds."
At the same event, Mr Zuckerberg offered an optimistic view of Mr Trump's presidency, saying that his goals of improving global healthcare and connectivity did not necessarily require the co-operation of government.
Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook | Shares in Sony have climbed 1.7% after the latest instalment of the Spider-Man film franchise beat expectations at the North American box office.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Facing criticism that fake news on Facebook aided the rise of Donald Trump, founder Mark Zuckerberg has strongly defended his network. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | Wyke College, in Hull, was closed after receiving a threatening email on Friday morning.
Humberside Police sent officers to the school but later said on Twitter the threat was thought to be "one of a number of hoax emails sent to educational facilities worldwide".
Details of other sites targeted have not been released.
The force said the college had been closed as a "precautionary measure" while an investigation takes place.
The spokesperson said: "It is not thought that there is a threat to the safety of the staff, students or public, however Humberside Police officers have been deployed to the location to provide reassurance and complete an investigation into the threats received."
College principal Jay Trivedy said: "There was an email that was sent to our offices this morning and the email indicated that there was a security issue.
"Obviously our students and our staff are our top concern and and what we've done is make the decision to close the college today."
However, he said he was "disappointed and angry" at the disturbance to student.
"It's very sad that something like this can disrupt so many individuals and their work," he said.
Pauline McLynn was the earnest, scatty priest's housekeeper Mrs Doyle in the sitcom.
Her catchphrase was "You will, you will, you will," as she pressed tea upon all newcomers.
It is 20 years since the Channel 4 comedy was first screened.
It told the story of three priests and their housekeeper on remote Craggy Island and captivated audiences in Ireland and across the UK with its unholy brand of fun.
Down with this sort of thing!
That would be an ecumenical matter.
You will, you will, you will!
That money was just resting in my account.
Nuns! Nuns! Reverse!
Ms McLynn said the series resonates with all ages.
"A friend of mine has two children who are five and seven and they are totally devoted to Father Ted. Every new generation we are getting new fans," said Ms McLynn.
"This time 20 years ago, we had made six episodes. Honestly, we didn't think anybody would watch it, or notice it was on, although we found it funny. But that doesn't necessarily mean everybody else would."
Ms McLynn told BBC NI's Good Morning Ulster on Tuesday that there was an innocence to the show.
"It is about these four people who are stuck with one another and every week we start at the same place, which is hell.
"It is so simple and so stupid that everybody can enjoy it. By stupid, I mean desperately funny. These things couldn't happen in real life, but they do in the land of Ted."
She confessed that it had taken her years to be able to offer anyone tea after her role in Father Ted.
When she landed her current role in the BBC's Eastenders, she said she had to offer someone tea in her role as Charlie Cotton's mother, Yvonne, and she was reluctant to do it.
In 1998, Dermot Morgan who played loveable rogue Fr Ted died suddenly at his home in London. He was 45 years old.
"The best thing would be if he was here. He'd be dining out on Father Ted. But he will never grow old and he will always be gorgeous," Ms McLynn said.
The flight lasted about an hour and a half and a massive rocket helped to blast the two tonne craft into space.
The space plane successfully landed in the Pacific Ocean, and the director-general of the ESA said that the test "couldn't have gone better."
Scientists launched the craft to learn how to overcome the problems they face when trying to come back to Earth.
When spacecrafts re-enter the Earth's atmosphere, the air slows down the space ship causing friction.
This friction then causes the craft to heat up, and could be quite dangerous for the mini-plane.
On its return to Earth the surface of the mini-space shuttle reached temperatures of 1,700 degrees Celsius.
The ESA hope that this test will help improve how space shuttles re-enter the Earth's atmosphere allowing them to be re-used more than once. | A sixth-form college has been closed after receiving "threats to the college staff and pupils", police say.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The Irish actress who played the priests' housekeeper in comedy series Father Ted has confessed that she has had real difficulty offering anyone a cup of tea ever since.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The Europe Space Agency (ESA) has successfully completed its first test flight of a new space plane. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The 16-year-old was arrested as part of a policing operation to use stop and search powers.
The force said officers had been authorised to use the powers after receiving information that "serious disorder was being planned between hooligan elements of both clubs".
Eleven people in total were arrested.
A second man, aged 24, was charged with possession of an offensive weapon.
Both of those charged were also served with football banning notice applications and will appear before courts in the coming weeks.
The other eight men and one youth were arrested on suspicion of offences including affray, criminal damage and threats to damage, and remain in police custody.
In total, 87 people were stopped and searched.
Assistant Chief Constable Phil Kay, said: "As a result of the actions we took we were able to prevent serious disorder from taking place and allow law abiding supporters to enjoy the game."
The council has been granted £177,300 from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) to help prepare plans to revamp the Grade II-listed Market Arcade on High Street.
Almost half of the shops are vacant and it has suffered from anti-social behaviour and pest issues.
The council said the funding would help prevent the "spiral of decline" that threatens the "historic asset".
The funding will pay for the development of a project plan as well as a full-time manager to oversee it.
The council said the arcade, opened in 1905, had historical significance which was intertwined with the growth of Newport as a town following the Industrial Revolution.
In the past year, the local authority has looked at ways of improving it and a campaign was launched.
The funding award also means that, subject to a successful second application, a further £1.1m HLF cash will be set aside for the project.
The council, shop owners and Welsh Government's heritage body Cadw would then need to match the funding.
The two are embroiled in a long-running dispute over the role of guards, with talks due to begin on Wednesday.
Parent firm Govia Thameslink (GTR) asked Acas to mediate in an attempt to avert what the firm said was "damaging" and "unnecessary" strike action.
It has set a deadline of Thursday to avoid the strike schedule.
Southern services have been beset by delays and cancellations for weeks due to the dispute and staff shortages, which the company has blamed on high levels of sickness.
The RMT has offered to suspend the week-long strike - due to begin on Monday - if Southern puts its plans for guards on hold.
The plans involve new trains where the driver operates the doors using CCTV but the RMT fears job losses and has safety concerns.
It said the safety of the travelling public on "dangerously overcrowded trains and platforms" was "the fundamental issue at the heart of this dispute".
If the strike goes ahead, Southern said it would run a restricted service. Many routes would have fewer trains and some routes would have none at all.
However, it said with the use of "contingency" conductors it would run almost 60% of its normal timetable.
GTR passenger service director Angie Doll said: "We are sorry that our passengers once again look set to suffer further disruption because of the RMT."
She said the action was unnecessary as the plans would cost no-one their jobs and would free up staff on board trains to better serve passengers.
She also claimed the changes would lead to fewer cancellations in future.
"The new on-board supervisor will be able to go anywhere on our network, significantly reducing the perennial problem of train cancellations due to conductors not being available when they're delayed by disruption, for example," she said.
At an evening rally in Brighton, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn called for an end to Southern's franchise and repeated his party's commitment to return railways to public ownership.
He said: "They should have said, 'if you cut the services, we'll cut you out'. But that would take a government that stood up for people.
"What is the point of a franchise agreement … if a company can walk away from their commitments at no cost?"
When the strike dates were announced, rail minister Paul Maynard said RMT bosses were overlooking their impact on the travelling public and claimed GTR's changes would modernise services and be better for passengers . | A teenager has been charged with possession of a firework at Saturday's football match between Leicester City and Aston Villa.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Plans to restore Newport's oldest surviving shopping arcade have moved a step forward.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Southern has promised to run 60% of its normal timetable if a five-day strike by the Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers union (RMT) goes ahead. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Negotiations drew to a close on Saturday afternoon without agreement and are set to resume on Monday.
But Mr Adams said a deal was unlikely to happen by Monday when the Northern Ireland secretary is due to update MPs on his next course of action.
Earlier, the DUP accused Sinn Féin of having a "shopping list" of demands.
The mood music from the negotiations has not been good over the past 24 hours, with each side blaming each other for refusing to compromise on a number of contentious issues.
Matrimonial matters meant the leaders of both Sinn Féin and the DUP temporarily paused their participation in the talks on Saturday
Negotiations finished on Saturday when Mr Adams and other Sinn Féin negotiators left to attend a rally protesting against Northern Ireland's ban on same-sex marriage.
They had to get to the Belfast city centre demonstration by 15:00 BST.
It is understood that the DUP leader Arlene Foster attended a wedding on Saturday morning, but returned to the negotiations at Stormont Castle after the ceremony.
Mrs Foster and Sinn Féin's northern leader, Michelle O'Neill, spoke separately to Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday night.
Mrs May urged them to reach an agreement and said the government would do everything it could to help bring the talks to a successful conclusion.
But speaking on Saturday, Mr Adams said: "The DUP are showing no urgency about dealing with the equality and rights issues, which caused the collapse of the political institutions.
"There is little prospect that they will do this before Monday.
"There is no agreement on Acht na Gaeilge [Irish language act], the Bill of Rights, marriage equality, respect, anti-sectarian measures or legacy issues. Equality, rights and respect are the only basis for sustainable institutions."
The Sinn Féin leader said this could only be achieved with "a step change in the DUP position".
"A starting point for all the parties and especially the DUP has to be that there can be no return to the status quo. The institutions have to deliver for all citizens," he said.
On Friday night, the DUP's Christopher Stalford said Sinn Féin had presented a "shopping list" of demands and was refusing to go back into government until they had received every item on their list.
He also said that politicians needed to stop "using culture as a stick to poke each other with".
Secretary of State James Brokenshire has the option of extending the talks, calling another assembly election or reintroducing direct rule.
On Saturday, he said: "I still believe power-sharing can happen, but it has not happened yet."
Mr Brokenshire said there were no deadlines but he would be making a statement to Parliament on Monday afternoon to update the House of Commons on what the next steps in the talks might look like.
On the BBC's Any Questions on Friday, he said that the absence of devolved government in Northern Ireland "cannot continue for much longer".
Mr Brokenshire said the Northern Ireland Civil Service "has effectively been running the show" and decisions on budgets need to be taken by politicians.
The head of the civil service in Northern Ireland, Sir Malcolm McKibbin formally retired on Friday.
But the parties have asked him to continue chairing the negotiations.
Sinn Féin's demand for an Irish language act is a major stumbling block, with the DUP refusing to agree to it as part of any deal. | Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams has accused the DUP of lacking a sense of urgency in talks aimed at restoring power-sharing in Northern Ireland. |
What is the summary of the following document? | The goal came after just seven minutes in Valencia after great link-up play between Helen Richardson-Walsh, Sophie Bray and goalscorer Lily Owsley.
Great Britain had chances to double their lead but were denied by Germany goalkeeper Kristina Reynolds.
And GB goalkeeper Maddie Hinch made a number of late saves.
She said: "Words can't really describe the feeling. To reach a final and book a spot at Rio, we can't be happier."
Owsley's first goal in the competition ensured Danny Kerry's side remain unbeaten in the World League and will face China in Sunday's final.
"For 15 minutes we were awesome. After that we won ugly," Kerry said.
The top three teams in the World League qualify for next year's Olympics and by winning the semi-final it guaranteed GB's passage to Rio.
A new engine fitted to the Spaniard's McLaren for first practice on Friday developed a water leak and Honda decided to replace the whole unit.
As that means he will be using a sixth example of all the six constituent parts of the engine, it will incur a 35-place penalty and relegation to the back of the grid.
Alonso, 35, becomes the third driver to land a penalty for using more than the permitted number of engine parts at this race.
World championship leader Lewis Hamilton has already been handed a 30-place penalty for using his sixth turbo and MGU-H in the first session, and is expected to earn another one when a further new engine is fitted for the second session.
Mercedes are taking all the necessary penalties in one go for giving Hamilton the engine parts he needs to finish the season and may yet take a third engine ahead of final practice on Saturday.
And Sauber's Marcus Ericsson will receive a 10-place grid drop for using his sixth turbo. The driver with the highest number of penalties will be the one who starts last on the grid on Sunday, although one of them may choose to start from the pit lane.
The new engine fitted to Alonso's car includes the major development upgrade Honda has introduced for this race.
This includes improvements to the internal combustion engine, turbo and compressor which Honda say should amount to a lap-time improvement of about 0.2 seconds.
Labour councillor Simon Carter, who has represented Bury Council's Tottington ward since 2012, faces 16 counts.
Mr Carter, 53, of Rakewood Avenue, Littleborough, appeared before Manchester and Salford Magistrates' Court.
An ex-member of the council's Standards Committee, he was bailed to appear at Manchester Crown Court on 10 July.
A Bury Council spokesman said: "We can confirm that a Bury councillor has been charged with making indecent images of children.
"As the matter is under police jurisdiction, it would be inappropriate to comment further." | Great Britain's women have qualified for the 2016 Rio Olympics after beating Germany 1-0 in the semi-finals of hockey's World League.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
McLaren driver Fernando Alonso will start the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps from the back of the grid because of a penalty for using too many engine parts.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Greater Manchester councillor has appeared in court charged with making indecent images of a child. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Redknapp, 69, will take charge of World Cup qualifiers against Bangladesh and Australia later this month.
He will combine his international duties with the advisory role at Derby to which he was appointed this week.
"This is a fantastic step for the national game in Jordan," said Jordan FA president Prince Ali bin al-Hussein.
"Harry is a world class manager with an internationally recognised record at the highest level."
He has also previously managed Bournemouth, West Ham, Portsmouth and Southampton.
Jordan, who have never qualified for a World Cup, are currently second in their group in the second of three phases of Asian qualifying for the 2018 finals in Russia.
They were previously managed by former England midfielder Ray Wilkins between September 2014 and June last year. | Former Tottenham and QPR boss Harry Redknapp has been appointed manager of the Jordan national team for their next two games. |
Write a summary for this information. | The man was a passenger in a Ford Galaxy people carrier which struck the central rope barrier on the road before coming to rest on the central reservation.
He was thrown from the vehicle and then hit by a northbound silver Mercedes.
Police have appealed for witnesses to the crash which happened at 17:05 on Friday.
The 40-year-old driver of the Ford Galaxy and his other three male passengers - aged, 23, 34 and 63 - were taken by ambulance to Wishaw General Hospital.
They were released after receiving treatment for minor injuries.
The 26-year-old driver of the Mercedes was not injured.
The road was re-opened at about 02:05 on Saturday. | A 40-year-old man has died after being hit by a car following a crash on the M74 near Beattock. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Steven Doris slotted into the bottom corner just after the half-hour mark for the home side.
Linton made no mistake from the spot after Ross Smith was punished for handball.
And he made it 2-1, again from the penalty spot, when Philip Johnston was the culprit, before Mark McLaughlin saw red for a second yellow card. | Two second-half penalties from Scott Linton saw 10-man Clyde come from behind to beat Stirling at Forthbank. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | The agent, codenamed Stakeknife, has been linked to more than 50 murders.
The investigation will be led by the chief constable of Bedfordshire Police.
The PSNI said it would "not seek to direct or control, or in any way interfere" with the inquiry, which could take up to five years.
The agent known as Stakeknife has been named in the media as Freddie Scappaticci, originally from west Belfast. Mr Scappaticci has denied the allegations.
During a press briefing on Friday, PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton said the investigation team would not include any current or former members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), PSNI, Ministry of Defence or MI5.
"After taking a number of issues into consideration, I have decided that a team resourced with external officers and staff funded by the PSNI is the most appropriate way forward, given the size, scale and complexity of the investigation," he said.
The chief constable said the team would consist of between 50 and 70 investigators.
Mr Hamilton also introduced the man who will lead the investigation, Jon Boutcher, the chief constable of Bedfordshire Police.
"I am humbled to have been asked to lead such a critically important and complex investigation," he said.
"I do not underestimate the huge task of establishing the circumstances behind how and why these murders occurred during those dark days.
"My principal aim in taking responsibility for this investigation is to bring those responsible for these awful crimes, in whatever capacity they were involved, to justice.
"As soon as officers and staff are in place the investigation team will begin reaching out to victims, victims' families and all interested parties to receive information."
Who is Stakeknife?
Freddie Scappaticci is alleged to have been the most high ranking British agent within the Provisional IRA who was given the codename 'Stakeknife'.
He was the grandson of an Italian immigrant who came to Northern Ireland in search of work.
He has admitted, in the past, to being a republican but denies claims that he was an IRA informer.
He is believed to have led the IRA's internal security unit, known as 'the nutting squad,' which was responsible for identifying and interrogating suspected informers.
Mr Scappaticci left Northern Ireland when identified by the media as Stakeknife, in 2003.
In October 2015, the director of Public Prosecutions in Northern Ireland, Barra McGrory QC, announced that he had asked the police to investigate allegations that Stakeknife was involved in 24 murders.
The IRA's internal security unit is believed to have killed at least 53 people it claimed were informers between 1978 and 1995.
It is unlikely that Stakeknife had a role in of all of those killings, but they will all have to be re-investigated in an attempt to establish precisely the extent of his involvement.
The daughter of a woman who was allegedly murdered by the IRA said she was relieved that the investigation was "finally starting".
Belfast woman Caroline Moreland, a Catholic mother of three, was abducted and murdered in July 1994.
The body of the 34-year-old was found near Rosslea, County Fermanagh.
Her daughter, Shauna, said: "I'm still very cynical of getting the whole truth but I don't think I would be able to go on with this fight believing that I couldn't get aspects of the truth at least." | An investigation into the alleged activities of the Army's most high-ranking agent in the IRA will also examine possible crimes by IRA members, agents, Army and police handlers. |
Summarize the provided section. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Scott Allen set up Storm Running Club in Plymouth in April and numbers have already reached 300 members.
The club's aim is to get people more active and many of the members had never ran before joining Storm.
"It's absolutely unbelievable," Allen said when he was given the award.
Allen had a pig's valve inserted into his heart after suffering illness and had to learn to walk again after a blood clot in his leg meant he needed 100 staples in it after an operation.
"When you look at Scott's personal journey and the health issues he's had to overcome, it's been absolutely amazing," said Paul Elliott, who nominated Allen for the award.
"He's got his own personal journey that he's on at the moment, but when you see him out on the streets and he's with the runners you can just seen how proud the group makes him."
One of the people he inspired to take up running was Anita Outlaw, who wanted to run a marathon to raise money for a hospice after the death of the grandson.
From having never been running before, Scott and the group managed to get her into shape in just two months as she completed the Bath to Bristol marathon.
"Scott believed in me to help me get across that finish line," she said.
"He instils motivation, but he instils values into this team and it's not just about running, it's about the social aspect and supporting people and I've not seen anyone instil those values into a running club."
Allen will represent the South West at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards in Belfast later this month after being named ahead of four other South West nominees and will compete to be named the National Unsung Sporting Hero.
"I'm truly honoured to represent these people and the South West," he said.
"I want to thank all the other people that do great things, the other finalists were amazing, so I'm ever so proud and I feel so humble."
The Royal Marines Museum in Eastney will relocate to a boathouse next to The National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN) at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard.
A new Centre for Discovery will also feature more than two million artefacts, currently housed elsewhere.
Prof Dominic Tweddle, director general of NMRN, said it would "deepen and enrich" the visitor experience.
He said collections currently "dispersed and at risk across the country" in 30 separate locations, many in storage, would go on show.
Sir Peter Luff, chairman of the Heritage Lottery Fund, said: "We loved the National Museum of the Royal Navy's plans to tell the very human story of the Royal Navy.
"The Centre for Discovery will provide a new, spacious venue to relate this narrative while the relocation of the Royal Marines Museum will give it a more prominent home and increased visitor numbers.
"Having already invested £55m in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, we are confident this latest award of National Lottery money will enable the dockyard to build on its reputation as one of the South East's most popular heritage destinations."
The Royal Marines Museum will move into the Grade II-listed Victorian Boathouse 6.
It is also receiving £2m from money raised from fines after the Libor banking scandal, with a further £2.5m coming from fundraising.
The new museum is due to open in 2019. | A marathon runner who set up his own club after having open heart surgery and having to learn to walk again has won the 2015 BBC South West Unsung Sporting Hero award.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Two military museums in Hampshire will be brought together thanks to a lottery grant of almost £14m. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | Farooq Siddique formerly of the Bristol Muslim Society and an ex-government adviser on radicalisation, pleaded not guilty at Bristol Crown Court.
The 46-year-old from Easton also pleaded not guilty to two counts of assault causing actual bodily harm and one charge of making a threat to kill.
Speaking outside court he said the charges were "absolute nonsense".
"These are allegation that are, in my view, worse than murder," he claimed.
"You can't say anything worse to a man than these kind of allegations. I'm utterly flabbergasted that it's got this far.
"I'll prove myself innocent."
He was bailed and a trial date has been set for April.
The woman, who is in her 30s, reported that she had been assaulted in New Street in the town.
It happened at about 02:00 BST on Saturday
Police have appealed for anyone who was in the New Street area at the time and who noticed any suspicious activity to contact detectives. | A leading figure in Bristol's Muslim community has appeared in court charged with three counts of rape.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A 17-year-old boy has been arrested after a woman was allegedly raped in Randalstown, County Antrim. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The Rose-coloured Starling, normally found in eastern Europe, was seen in the garden of a house in Larchcroft Close, Ipswich, on Saturday.
Simon Fisk, 40, who lives in the road, said there were about 200 visitors.
"The road was jam packed and there was a constant flow of twitchers from about 10:00," he said.
"They were coming in groups of what seemed about 30 at a time.
"One of the residents has a cherry tree and apparently the bird was there numerous times throughout the day.
"The neighbours were very accommodating, letting them into the gardens so they could get a better view."
He said there had been a "handful" of visitors now but "nothing like yesterday".
The bird is also known as the Rosy Starling and Rose-colour Pastor.
The name Pastor comes from the Latin "pastor" meaning shepherd.
The adult has a pink body and black head.
One of the twitchers, Chris Mee, said: "The bird is not a British species. It is the first time I've seen one."
Mr Mee, from Ipswich, said he had been bird watching for 30 years.
Bird watcher Jason Ward, from Harlow, Essex, said: "The starling is a real stunner."
The birds are nomadic, travelling in huge flocks to winter in tropical Asia, mainly feeding on berries, fruits, grasshoppers and locusts. | A quiet residential street found itself at the centre of a frenzy of excitement for several hours as word spread that a rare bird had been spotted in the area. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | The organiser said the play portrays him as "evil" throughout so should not be performed where he rests.
The petition has been handed in to Leicester Cathedral.
Both the cathedral and theatre company Antic Disposition say they still intend to go ahead.
The play, which is touring the country, is due to be performed in Leicester on 19 and 20 July.
Joanne Larner, petition organiser, said: "It is inappropriate and disrespectful to perform that play, which blackens his name, where he is buried. He is meant to be buried in dignity and honour.
"The whole play is completely degrading. He is displayed as the personification of evil."
Joanne, 59, of Essex, added she does not mind it being held somewhere else, just not the cathedral.
A spokesman from Leicester Cathedral said it had no intention of changing its plans.
He said: "These performances will go ahead as we engage in the dynamics between the man and the myths of King Richard III. The performances will take place in the main body of the building. We continue to work with the public day by day to ensure that the King's grave is respected."
Ben Horslen and John Risebero, directors of Antic Disposition, added: "As a company that specialises in site-specific productions, we've found that staging Shakespeare's work in historic venues adds an extra dimension to his stories, and we are always excited to use our settings to allow audiences to connect with his work in new ways.
"Our two performances in Leicester Cathedral sold out within five days, demonstrating the support for and interest in the production." | A petition against Shakespeare's Richard III being performed at the cathedral where the monarch is buried has attracted more than 1,300 signatures. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Baucher was asked to explore the theme of immigration as part of the Imagine Festival in Belfast, and so set about coming up with an idea that would open the viewer's mind to a new way of seeing.
He set upon a plan to take pictures from the viewpoint of the sitter, each person looking down on a possession that reflects their journey to Northern Ireland.
He began with a few friends and then used social media to spread the word.
"Over two-thirds of the images came about because of this approach," says Baucher.
"Whilst I contacted some of the statutory bodies dealing with migrants there was an understandable reticence to be involved. With this in mind, I continued to find people who wouldn't necessarily fall into the broad term immigrant."
His pictures are simply captioned.
"The identities of the sitters is not revealed, just the countries their families lived in before their arrival here in Northern Ireland," adds Baucher.
"These images are just a very small sample of the complex demographic of Northern Ireland yet hold truths for us all."
The pictures are part of Belfast's Imagine: Festival of Ideas and Politics and are on show at the Framewerk Gallery in Belfast until 19 March.
You can see an earlier piece I wrote on John Baucher's Through the Viewfinder work here. | John Baucher has always approached his subject matter in new ways, and his latest series is no exception. |
Summarize the information given below. | Media playback is not supported on this device
This is the BBC's exciting new campaign. Together we'll be inspiring and empowering each other to feel as happy, healthy and confident as we can.
We want to know what makes YOU #BodyPositive. We asked a few well known faces for their ideas and we took to the streets to find out more. Take a look!
We'd love to hear from you on social media. Tweet us, visit us on Facebook and Instagram and get BodyPositive!
The bird fell into a container of chicken tikka masala while trying to scavenge a piece of meat from a food factory bin.
He was rescued by workers at the undisclosed site in south east Wales and picked up by a volunteer for Vale Wildlife Hospital near Tewkesbury.
Staff at the centre used washing up liquid to clean the gull's feathers.
They managed to return him back to his original white colour but have not been able to wash away the smell.
Lucy Kells, a veterinary nurse at the hospital in Worcestershire, said: "He really surprised everyone here - we had never seen anything like it before.
"The thing that shocked us the most was the smell. He smelled amazing, he really smelled good."
The blaze in two biomass storage hoppers at Tilbury power station broke out on Monday morning, but was brought under control by late afternoon.
Eight crews remained overnight to begin removing wooden pellets from nearby hoppers and to make preparations to empty embers from the affected ones.
Investigations are continuing into the cause of the fire.
The deputy chief fire officer of Essex County Fire and Rescue Service, Adam Eckley, said early indications suggested the fire may have started in conveyor belts above the hoppers, with material from that dropping into them.
He said: "Operations overnight looked at moving the affected biomass out of those two bunkers away from the site, but it was frustratingly slow progress, unfortunately."
It is expected it could take up to two days for the embers to be removed.
A foam blanket is being maintained on the affected hoppers to prevent the fire re-igniting.
The hoppers are about 60ft (18m) deep and can each hold up to 600 tonnes of wood pellets.
Mr Eckley said it was one of the largest fires the service had ever encountered.
At its height more than 120 firefighters were on site. Six crews are currently still there.
Tilbury power station manager Nigel Staves said all staff would be back on site on Tuesday and it was unlikely jobs would be affected by the fire.
"There is no immediate threat to jobs at the power station, quite the reverse," he said.
"We need the people here to actually get things back together again, once we can get to assess the damage."
Mr Staves said it was still too soon to know when the power station, which supplies 1% of electricity to the National Grid, would return to full capacity.
"Obviously we're going to have to assess the damage and the cost and the amount of time it will take to repair, but we have one unit that is available to generate electricity," he said.
"I'm hoping that once we can get to look at the damage and do a full assessment we can return the other two units to service as quickly as possible." | Welcome to the launch of #BodyPositive.
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A seagull turned bright orange after falling into a vat of curry.
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Fire crews are continuing to deal with the aftermath of a fire at an Essex power station. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | The 36-year-old started his career with the Shrimps and helped them win promotion to the Football League, scoring in their play-off final win over Exeter in 2007.
"I'm absolutely buzzing to be honest. I'm so glad to be back," Thompson said.
Morecambe have also re-signed 34-year-old midfielder Michael Rose on a one-year deal.
Rose made 50 appearances for the Shrimps last season after joining on a one-year deal in August.
"I spoke to the manager last season and there was never really any doubts in my mind that I would re-sign," he said.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. | Morecambe have re-signed veteran forward Garry Thompson on a one-year deal after his release by Wycombe. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Sheriff Mbye, 18, of Lee Bank, died in hospital on 17 April after being stabbed several times on Bristol Road South, Northfield, police said.
Montell Stephens, 18, of Smethwick, who was injured and taken to hospital, was charged, the West Midlands force said.
Mr Stephens, of William Savage Way, is due at Birmingham Magistrates' Court on Friday.
Rakeem Riley, 18, of no fixed address, and Omar Robinson, 21, of Rann Close, Ladywood, have previously been charged with murder. | A third man has been charged with the murder of a teenager who was stabbed during a fight in Birmingham. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Ukad last week postponed a hearing into the Briton testing positive for a banned substance in February 2015.
Fury, 28, had hoped to box in July but the British Boxing Board of Control told BBC Sport he is suspended "until the matter is dealt with by Ukad".
Ukad, which has not given a timeframe, does not comment on individual cases.
BBBofC general secretary Robert Smith said: "I haven't seen any new dates yet. I presume they are trying to sort them out with legal advisors but until that hearing, his licence is suspended."
Warren described the postponement of the hearing as a "liberty" and suggested the government could "intervene".
"Ukad have got a problem," said Warren. "He's entitled to make a living. If he's done wrong then get it over with. How can this be right? Why does it drag on from 2015?"
Fury also faces potential repercussions for refusing to fulfil a later test based on perceived persecution by Ukad.
Warren asserts this took place when the former heavyweight champion of the world was struggling to cope with depression and that when Fury's uncle and trainer called Ukad "an hour later", they "refused to come back".
Fury, 28, and his cousin and fellow heavyweight Hughie Fury, 22, were charged by Ukad in June 2016 as a result of urine tests conducted 14 months earlier which showed traces of nandrolone.
Between the failed tests and charge, Tyson Fury claimed the WBA, IBF and WBO world titles from Wladimir Klitschko, while Hughie Fury fought four times.
Both men deny any wrongdoing but their hearing was postponed after over two days when Ukad cited a "potential conflict of interest" on its panel.
Hughie Fury is still free to compete but Tyson lost his licence in October 2016 as the BBBofC moved "pending further investigation into anti-doping and medical issues".
If the case is dismissed, Warren hopes Fury will fight on 8 July on the undercard of Billy Joe Saunders' WBO middleweight title defence against Avtandil Khurtsidze in London. | Tyson Fury's boxing licence will not be reinstated until after his UK Anti-Doping (Ukad) hearing - which promoter Frank Warren fears could be in October. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Lesley Griffiths and First Minister Carwyn Jones met leading environment and agriculture figures in Cardiff Bay.
Ms Griffiths said her portfolio was "absolutely awash with EU funding, regulations, policies and legislation".
The Welsh Government Monday's meeting was a chance to discuss any concerns people had.
Ms Griffiths said: "My officials will be looking very carefully at what we need to unpick, what we can still use and where we can strengthen the legislation. We can have very Welsh-specific policies going forward."
Welsh Government officials have already begun to talk of a Welsh Agricultural Policy.
Ms Griffiths said the referendum result was a "situation we didn't want to see" and single market access was vital to Wales, with 90% of Welsh food and drink currently exported to the EU.
In terms of farming subsidies and EU funding for rural communities, she said the first minister had made clear to Prime Minister David Cameron he expected "to receive every penny that we would have got from the EU, from the UK government".
Mr Jones said securing the future of grant funding for farmers was "one of the most immediate concerns".
Vote Leave campaigners argued the Welsh and UK governments would design a new payments system for agriculture to replace EU subsidies.
In 2014, £240m was given to Welsh farmers in direct payments alone. Half made a loss, or would have done so that year, without them.
Between 2014 and 2020, £957m is meant to be made available via the Rural Development Programme - a system of grants and loans to support rural communities.
Country Land and Business Association Cymru director Rebecca Williams said the first priority should be "to establish a world-leading agricultural policy" and to ensure the sector played the "appropriate leading role in the critical trade negotiations that lie ahead".
Stephen James, president of NFU Cymru, said it was important politicians and those in the rural affairs sector worked together as the two years available to the UK to plan its exit from the EU would "pass very quickly". | Leaving the EU presents an opportunity for "very Welsh-specific policies" on farming and the environment, the rural affairs secretary has said. |
Can you summarize this content? | The Labour leader, who is visiting Scotland, said he hoped the position would have been resolved by then.
But he told BBC Scotland that he could give no guarantee.
Mr Corbyn is opposed to nuclear weapons but his party is presently committed to renewing the Trident system, which is based on the Clyde.
He said on Wednesday that he would not fire Britain's nuclear weapons if he were prime minister, with his comments being criticised by some senior Labour colleagues.
His visit to Scotland came four months after Labour lost 40 of its 41 Scottish MPs to the SNP in the general election.
Former Scottish Labour leader Johann Lamont resigned in December of last year, saying the Scottish party was being treated as a "branch office".
Left-winger Mr Corbyn, who won the leadership of his party last month, said his priority was winning back votes in Scotland and insisted he would not interfere in the "operation" of Scottish Labour.
Speaking to journalists outside the Scottish Parliament on Thursday, he said: "We're doing great, party membership is going up after my first conference as leader and things are going really well."
The Holyrood election takes place in May of next year when Scottish Labour, now led by Kezia Dugdale, will be defending 38 seats.
Speaking ahead of the visit, Mr Corbyn said: "Under my leadership there will be no question about who is in charge of the Scottish Labour Party.
"Kezia Dugdale is leader of our party in Scotland and I will be working alongside her to win back support for Labour."
He added: "Kez has said that she wants to make absolutely clear what the Labour Party stands for and who we stand with. That is also my mission across the UK.
"Too many people have told me that they think the Labour Party lost its way. We need to win back their trust by showing them exactly what difference a Labour government would make to their lives.
"The stakes are high for Scotland. People can't afford a Tory government whose policies are making people work harder for less or an SNP government that is intent on having the arguments of the past rather than looking to the future."
He visited the Scottish Parliament to meet MSPs before also meeting trade unionists and party activists.
The SNP had earlier challenged Mr Corbyn to use his visit to end what it termed "the chaos and confusion" over Labour's policy on replacing the Trident nuclear weapons system.
SNP deputy leader Stewart Hosie said: "Labour's position on Trident has become utterly indefensible.
"After days of chaos and infighting, Jeremy Corbyn must use his trip to Scotland to make clear whether he is leading Labour - or whether Labour is leading him.
"Jeremy Corbyn needs to be straight with the people of Scotland - will Labour oppose Trident nuclear weapons on our shores, or simply allow the Tories to go ahead with this outdated and unwanted project." | Jeremy Corbyn has said Labour may have to go into next year's Holyrood elections without having a clear position on Trident. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Its cheapest offer is aggressively priced at a discounted rate of £5 a month for existing BT broadband customers.
The service will use spectrum provided via a partnership with EE - a network BT is attempting to buy outright - and spectrum that BT owns itself.
One analyst said bundled access to football games would help the company.
BT is offering customers who sign up to its BT Mobile contracts the ability to watch Premier League football matches that it owns the rights to via an app, even if they are not broadband customers.
"An entry tariff of £5 a month will grab headlines, but inclusive access to BT Sport and five million wi-fi hotspots offers important differentiation in a cut-throat field," commented Paolo Pescatore, from the telecoms consultancy CCS Insight.
"We expect initial low-key marketing to heat up as BT makes a broader assault on the bundled telecom market over the summer."
BT's basic deal - which includes 200 minutes of calls and 500MB of 4G data - will cost £10 a month to customers who do not have a BT broadband subscription.
BT is the UK's biggest broadband provider with 7.6 million consumers signed up to the service, according to its latest figures.
The mobile deals it has announced so far are all Sim-card-only, meaning that calls, data and texts are included but not a handset.
BT has said it will provide more details of its strategy after its proposed £12.5bn takeover of EE - currently co-owned by Orange and Deutsche Telekom - is complete.
Regulators have still to sign off on the acquisition, which is opposed by some of BT's rivals.
BT was one of the pioneers of the UK's mobile phone sector with its Cellnet service in the 1980s, but later spun off the business.
The mobile phone firm, which was rebranded as O2, was later acquired by Spain's Telefonica.
The UK's second biggest broadband provider, Sky, has also announced plans to offer a mobile phone service, allowing it to offer its own rival "quad-play" bundle - including internet, landline phone, TV and mobile - but has not scheduled the launch until 2016.
Virgin Media and TalkTalk - the country's third and fourth biggest broadband firms, do offer packages including all four services.
However, their mobile phone services are both limited to 3G data at this stage, meaning they are likely to provide slower mobile internet speeds than BT's 4G service.
A spokesman for TalkTalk said it would begin offering 4G "later this year" through a deal with O2.
At launch, BT Mobile will be totally dependant on EE's network.
However, BT intends to make use of 2.6 GHz radio frequencies, which it bought as part of 2013's 4G auction, to let its customers boost reception inside buildings via special base stations called femtocells within the next 18 months.
"BT is a credible player in the telecoms market and will be in a far stronger position next year with the inclusion of EE, subject to regulatory approval," said Mr Pescatore.
"Rivals should be threatened by this move and Sky in particular will need to react given how punchy BT's SIM only deals are.
"With this in mind Sky may need to launch mobile a lot sooner." | BT is re-entering the UK's consumer mobile phone market, with a range of 4G subscriptions. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir is being held on charges of arson, bombings and vandalism.
His arrest comes as opposition leader Khaleda Zia was confined by police to her offices for a fourth day.
The unrest comes on the first anniversary of disputed elections.
The vote - boycotted by the opposition who said it would be rigged - was won by the ruling Awami League.
Mr Alamgir was arrested as he tried to leave the National Press Club in Dhaka, where he said he was forced to stay overnight on Monday after it had been surrounded by pro-government supporters.
Witnesses say that his car was commandeered by police officers who drove it to their headquarters.
Speaking just before his arrest he warned that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government was turning the country into a "vast prison".
He repeated calls for the opposition to enforce a nationwide transport blockade.
The government for its part has warned that Ms Zia could face murder charges over an arson attack it says was carried out by BNP supporters which left three people fighting for their lives.
The authorities have also detained the chairman of a private television channel after it carried a speech by Khaleda Zia's son from self-imposed exile in London.
Security forces say they want to stop violence and are preventing Ms Zia from leaving her party offices in Dhaka to give her "enhanced security".
Ms Zia and her arch rival, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, have both frequently called for general strikes and blockades while in opposition.
Thousands of riot police have been patrolling almost deserted streets in the capital where there were isolated clashes between opposition supporters and police on Tuesday. Authorities have cancelled most bus, rail and ferry services into the city to prevent mass rallies.
Violence broke out in various parts of the country on Monday, and four anti-government protesters were killed.
The opposition are angry that Sheikh Hasina, who has been in power since 2009, refused to stand aside to make way for a neutral caretaker administration to oversee the 2014 election.
Dozens of BNP workers have disappeared since last year's election, with human rights groups blaming the government. The government has denied the claims.
The two women leaders have alternated in power for most of the last two decades when the army was not in government. | Police in Bangladesh have arrested the deputy leader of the main opposition party, as tensions rise over its calls for nationwide protests and blockades. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | About 300 people braved the North Sea at Cromer Pier earlier, with thousands looking on from the promenade.
"I think it could well have been a record year, with more spectators than ever before, too," said organiser Clive Hedges.
Christmas Day swims were also held at Lowestoft and Felixstowe in Suffolk, Clacton, Essex and Hunstanton, Norfolk.
Mike Rodwell, who took part in the Clacton swim, said the North Sea was an "unusually warm" 10C for Friday's dip.
"A crowd of over 500 watched well over 100 hardy souls," he added.
The annual event in Cromer has taken place in the seaside town since 1985 when it was originally organised as "a bit of a dare" and is now a much anticipated tradition in the seaside town.
Air temperatures were below zero in 2014, but were a comparatively balmy 15C on Saturday.
Mr Hedges added: "The event has grown in popularity but the mild weather helped.
"I can assure you the sea was as cold as ever though."
He said he hoped the event raised about £2,000 for Mesothelioma UK, an asbestos-related cancer charity, in memory of runner Alec Fraser, who died last year. | The mild weather is believed to have contributed to a big turnout for festive swims around the East Coast. |
Summarize this article briefly. | 21 February 2017 Last updated at 18:21 GMT
She believed that if she had had the right support and been in the right environment then she would not have faced the struggles that she did.
Ms Wells said: "I came out at the age of 13 at an all-girls Catholic school only to be told by those around me that it was just a phase."
With no support or guidance, the situation led to more confusion, the MSP told her fellow politicians during a debate on LGBT History Month Scotland 2017. | Scottish Conservative MSP Annie Wells tells Holyrood that coming to terms with being gay as a young teenager took her to a "dark and confusing place". |
Provide a summary of the section below. | In celebration of astonishing aliases and marvellous monikers from throughout pop history, we take a look back at some of the most bizarre names in music.
In 1993, Prince changed his name to a symbol.
A mash up of the male and female gender symbols - and officially referred to as The Love Symbol - he wrote in a statement at the time that it was "an unpronounceable symbol whose meaning has not been identified. It's all about thinking in new ways, tuning in 2 a new free-quency".
Floppy disks containing the font file for The Love Symbol were distributed to the press, allowing journalists everywhere to type Prince's new name, even though they had no idea how to say it out loud. Instead, most chose to go with somewhat clumsier The Artist Formerly Known As Prince or simply The Artist.
Prince's name change had its roots in a conflict with record company Warner Bros. "Warner Bros took the name, trademarked it, and used it as the main marketing took to promote all of the music I wrote," Prince said. "The company owns the name Prince and all related music marketed under Prince. I became merely a pawn used to produce more money for Warner Bros."
In 2000, after the contract expired, Prince went back to simply being called Prince.
Fans of zoology will know monkeys are not native to the Arctic Circle, but that didn't stop Sheffield's favourite indie four-piece from naming themselves after non-existent sub-zero simians.
There's no deep and meaningful reason behind Arctic Monkeys' name. In fact, in 2011 singer Alex Turner revealed in an interview with Q Magazine that Arctic Monkeys was chosen precisely because it was meaningless.
"I've no idea where it came from. It was Jamie [Cook, guitarist]'s fault, he came up with it and he's never even told us why. If he even knows, he's keeping it a secret from me.
"There might have been other ideas for offshoots at the time, but the Monkeys was the first one. It sounds like a first band name, doesn't it? It's so bad that the tribute bands don't sound worse. I saw there's an Aertex Monkeys, that's pretty clever."
Not to be outdone by Prince in the name-changing stakes, Sean John Combs has officially had seven separate sobriquets throughout his rap career.
His 1997 debut album No Way Out was released under the name Puff Daddy - the "Puff" part supposedly derived from his childhood reputation that he would "huff and puff" when he was angry, and the "Daddy" being a popular rap tag of the day meaning "The Man".
He reverted to the simple Sean John until follow-up LP Forever hit record stores in 1999. Combs began referring to himself as Puffy in the press, even though Puff Daddy remained his official title.
Later that year, after being charged and cleared of bribery and four weapons-related offences, he told MTV he wanted to break from the past, saying "no more Puff Daddy... I just want something fresh. I'm rocking with P Diddy now." This latest epithet had been suggested by his late friend the Notorious B.I.G.
Ever restless, Combs dropped the "P" to become just "Diddy" in 2003, telling NBC: "I felt the 'P' was coming between me and my fans."
Following an impressive eight consecutive years using just one name, in 2011 Combs shocked the rap world yet again with the change to Swag. He even set up a Twitter account @iamswag, which went dormant five days later.
Just in time for the release of his 2014 mixtape MMM, Combs told fans they'd been getting it wrong for the preceding 13 years, as his name had actually been Puff Daddy all along.
Combs' musical swansong No Way Out 2 is set to be released in April 2017 under the name Puff Daddy. As he retires from the biz forever, so too will his many monikers, he told CNN in 2016.
"Now I'm just good old Sean. I'm back to me. I have different personalities, you know what I'm saying? Nobody knows who's coming downstairs in the morning."
Of all the parts of human anatomy to name a band after, the elbow is especially odd.
Guy Garvey and co spent years going by the name Mr Soft when they formed at Bury College in 1991, inspired by a character from an infamous soft mints commercial.
In time they dropped the "Mr" to simply become Soft, until 1997, when they changed to Elbow, allegedly because of how the word was described as "the most sensuous in the English language" in BBC TV drama The Singing Detective.
Born Arnold George Dorsey in 1936, the legendary Leicester crooner initially tried to make his name in showbiz under the name Jerry Dorsey, owing to his ability to do an uncanny impression of comedian Jerry Lewis.
For a decade, Dorsey struggled to make an impact on the music scene, until he teamed up with manager George Mills, who suggested Dorsey borrow the name Engelbert Humperdinck from a 19th Century German composer.
The gamble paid off when Release Me went to number one, beating The Beatles' double A-side Strawberry Fields Forever/Penny Lane to the top slot in 1967.
"I had no choice," Dorsey later said of the name change. "I was a starving singer, and someone was giving me a chance to get on in the business."
Years later, Engelbert Humperdinck grew fond enough of his weird new name to legally adopt it by deed poll.
It goes to show that having a bizarre name is no hindrance to musical success. What might sound daft when first heard has the potential to become an all-time classic.
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | The announcement that 2019's Glastonbury Festival spin-off is to be named The Variety Bazaar was met with mass bemusement on social media. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | The 19-year-old lost the first five games of her first major quarter-final before winning 4-6 6-2 6-2.
She will play Swiss 30th seed Timea Bacsinszky, who beat France's Kristina Mladenovic 6-4 6-4.
"I'm really happy, I can't believe it," world number 47 Ostapenko said.
Ostapenko will meet 27-year-old Bacsinszky in their semi-final on Thursday - when both players celebrate their birthdays.
The pair eventually won their quarter-final matches after torrential rain disrupted the first two women's last-eight ties in Paris.
Two rain delays - totalling almost four hours - meant Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic's French Open quarter-finals were postponed until Wednesday.
Ostapenko is the first teenager to reach the Roland Garros semi-finals since Serbia's Ana Ivanovic and the first to book a place in a Grand Slam semi-final since American Madison Keys at the 2015 US Open.
"It was tough because we had to go away two times from the court," Ostapenko said.
"Caroline is a tough opponent, I knew I had to stay aggressive, I lost it sometimes but I found my game."
With pregnant Serena Williams missing and a number of notable early exits, a first-time Grand Slam women's singles champion will be crowned in Paris.
Wozniacki, 26, boasted the best pedigree of the eight players left in the draw, and was tipped by some observers to win her first major title.
The Dane ended the year as world number one in 2010 and 2011 and has reached two US Open finals without success.
The gulf in experience between Wozniacki, who was competing in her eighth Grand Slam quarter-final, and Ostapenko was huge.
The Latvian looked a little nervous as Wozniacki eased into a 5-0 lead in the first set, but pegged her back to 5-4 before Wozniacki broke her serve for a third time to clinch the opener.
Ostapenko took only two of 11 break points in the first set, but was more clinical when the chances continued to come in the second set.
Both players again struggled to hold their serve, exchanging breaks before Ostapenko rattled off three games in a row to lead 5-2.
Ostapenko served out for the set after the first three-hour rain delay, and then grew in confidence in the decider as Wozniacki wobbled.
Ostapenko broke her serve in the fifth game, going on to win the final five games to become the first Latvian women to reach a Grand Slam semi-final in the Open Era.
After beating defending champion Garbine Muguruza in the previous round, the home fans had hoped Mladenovic could end France's 17-year wait for a home winner at Roland Garros.
Both players struggled in the blustery conditions in the first part of the match but the French 24-year-old in particular lacked the intensity and power of her Muguruza win.
Mladenovic fought off a break point immediately after the first rain delay at the start of the second set, and broke serve in the following game, but Bacsinszky came back to win in one hour 49 minutes on court.
The win puts the 27-year-old Swiss into the French Open semi-finals for the second time, having been beaten in the last four by Serena Williams in 2015.
Bacsinszky almost quit tennis under the pressure of what she called a "control freak" father in 2013 but is now a win away from her first Grand Slam final.
Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent at Roland Garros:
"The rain delays - one of which lasted over three hours - did Mladenovic no favours. She loves to work the crowd and after a sequence of emotional and narrow victories in earlier rounds, it all fell a bit flat on the Philippe Chatrier Court.
"Much of that was down to Bacsinszky, who was the superior player, and now a semi-finalist for the second time in three years.
"Ostapenko was magnificent in the other completed quarter-final. She makes a lot of unforced errors, but hit 38 winners to Wozniacki's six as she coped so well with her first taste of a Grand Slam quarter-final." | Unseeded Latvian Jelena Ostapenko became the first teenager to reach the French Open women's semi-finals since 2007 with a shock win against former world number one Caroline Wozniacki. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | Posters which described the cat, Murray, as "aggressive" and urged its owner to have him neutered were spotted in Clifton village, Bristol.
Murray's owner said he was a rescue cat from the RSPCA and was already neutered. Murray later returned home but was said to be "timid".
The RSPCA said it took "threats aimed at animals very seriously".
The owner said he was shocked as the cat looked "terrified". After returning home Murray was "off his food".
The posters, put up in the York Place area of Clifton, stated: "If this is your cat please do the right thing and have him neutered...
"No harm has come to this cat; however the cat trap will continue to be set to try to deter him."
An RSPCA spokesperson said if anyone caused "unnecessary suffering to someone's pet, they can face a fine of up to £20,000 or up to six months in prison".
Fairweather defeated his fellow Irish amateur international Tiarnon McLarnon and Irish Boys international Mulligan in a play-off to win the amateur event.
With Mulligan the leading Under-18, he also earns an NI Open spot.
Fairweather's win came four days after he lost in the North of Ireland Final.
The Belfast man shot rounds of 72 and 74 to tie on four-over 146 with McLarnon (77, 69) and Mulligan (69,77).
Fairweather was leading by one playing the final hole in the 36-hole strokeplay event but lost his ball off the tee.
The 26-year-old eventually made a bogey six to force a play-off with Massereene's 2015 winner McLarnon and Mulligan.
The new champion didn't make the same mistake in sudden death after hitting a long drive down the fairway before firing a seven-iron onto the green to set up a two-putt birdie from 20 feet.
McLarnon missed a five-footer for his birdie, while Mulligan lost a ball off the tee, and though he still managed a par it was Fairweather who took the spoils.
"My putting wasn't up to scratch but I struck the ball very well and still managed to get it round. I'm over the moon to win here today and claim a place in the NI Open," said Fairweather, who will now tee it up alongside the professionals in the Galgorm Resort & Spa-sponsored Northern Ireland Open from 10-13 August.
Although Mulligan lost out in the play-off, the 17-year-old had already secured the second NI Open place up for grabs for the leading under-18.
"It's great, I came here to secure the under-18 invite," said the Leinster player, who also represented Great Britain & Ireland Boys in the Jacques Leglise Trophy in 2016.
This year's Northern Ireland Open introduces a new Shootout Sunday, which will see the leading 24 players after Saturday's action compete in six-hole strokeplay match play games in a knockout format. | A man whose pet cat went missing was angered to find it pictured in a cage and displayed on posters near his home.
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Knock's Colin Fairweather and Laytown & Bettystown Thomas Mulligan clinched the Northern Ireland Open spots available at Tuesday's Northern Ireland Amateur Open at Galgorm Castle. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | The handover was done at sea, in a sign of easing tensions between the two neighbouring countries.
The Indian navy handed over 52 fishermen to Sri Lanka, while 51 Indians went the other way.
One Indian remains in hospital in Sri Lanka and 236 others are still detained there. Some 152 Sri Lankan fishermen remain in India.
Thursday's repatriation comes ahead of 20 January talks between the two sides, and more releases are expected to follow.
The BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo says a bilateral fisheries committee of six people is now expected to meet regularly.
Attacks and accusations of poaching by fishermen have continued to plague relations between the countries.
In 2011, the Sri Lankan authorities arrested 136 Indian fishermen who they accused of fishing in their waters. The men were only released after a series of diplomatic meetings.
Villagers in southern India also accused the Sri Lankan navy of killing two Indian fishermen that year.
The Policy Exchange think tank says they will become an "ever more significant part of Britain, especially in future elections".
So politicians must stop treating the various communities as if they are "one homogeneous" group, it adds.
There are "striking differences" between them, its report says.
Policy Exchange's study, A Portrait Of Modern Britain, argues immigration from the Caribbean, the Indian subcontinent and Africa since World War Two has resulted in diverse groups with widely differing opinions, experiences and traditions.
But politicians have failed to address them individually, it says, even though there are "meaningful differences between each of these communities, which need to be fully understood".
Report co-author Rishi Sunak said: "These communities will continue to become an ever more significant part of Britain, especially in future elections.
"However, as our research demonstrates, ethnic minorities are not one homogeneous political group.
"From education to employment, housing to trust in the police, politicians from all parties must understand the different issues affecting individual communities."
The report looks at the five largest minority groups in the UK:
Policy Exchange, which is a centre-right think tank, says eight million people, or 14% of the UK population, are currently from ethnic minorities.
But the BME population now accounts for 80% of growth and has doubled in the past decade, while the white population has remained constant, it adds.
Voters in BME communities overwhelmingly identify with and vote for the Labour Party "regardless of class or association with Conservative policies", Policy Exchange says, with 68% voting for it at the 2010 general election, compared with 16% for the Conservatives and 14% for the Liberal Democrats.
Taoiseach (prime minister) Enda Kenny said it was time to "intensify our engagement" after Theresa May indicated she would trigger the mechanism for leaving the EU next March.
The Irish government said the island's main political parties will be invited, as well as trade unions and NGOs.
But Northern Ireland's First Minister said there was "no need" for the forum.
Arlene Foster told an event at the Conservative Party conference that such a summit would lead to "grandstanding".
The Irish government first proposed an all-island forum in the wake of June's EU referendum result.
Sinn Féin supported the idea, but the DUP have said that existing cross-border bodies could be used to work out the implications of Brexit on the island of Ireland.
In a statement, the Irish government said a "broad range of civic society groups, trade unions, business groups and non-governmental organisations", as well as political parties, would be invited to the first meeting of the "all-island civic dialogue" on 2 November.
The meeting will be hosted in Dublin by Mr Kenny and Irish Foreign Minister Charlie Flanagan.
Speaking after the announcement on Tuesday, Mr Kenny said: "Ireland faces unique challenges from Brexit, not least given the all-island issues that arise."
The Irish government said the priority of the forum would be the Irish economy and trade with the UK; the peace process and Northern Ireland; and the Common Travel Area (CTA) between Ireland and the UK.
Even though the UK voted overall to leave the EU, a 56% majority in Northern Ireland wanted to remain.
The question of what will happen to the Irish border in the wake of Brexit has been the subject of much debate since the referendum.
Last week, the prime minister denied making a U-turn over the Irish border after she said she wants to maintain free movement.
Mrs May said in June, when she was home secretary, that it was "inconceivable" that there will not be any changes to border arrangements between Northern Ireland and the Republic. | India and Sri Lanka have exchanged dozens of fishermen who were jailed for straying across the maritime boundary.
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Black and minority ethnic (BME) communities are expected to account for up to 30% of the UK's population by 2050, research suggests.
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The Irish government is to hold an all-island forum next month to examine the implications of Brexit. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Ms Brewster, 32, from Sheffield, was among 22 people who died in the suicide bomb attack at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena in May.
She had gone to the gig with her sister and niece, both of whom were injured in the explosion.
The service will feature a number of Ms Brewster's favourite songs along with tributes from family and friends.
Ms Brewster was a former City School pupil who worked for Irwin Mitchell Solicitors and insurance company Aviva.
The family have asked for donations to be sent to the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital. | The funeral of Manchester terror attack victim Kelly Brewster is due to take place later. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Iwobi, who has represented England at under-16, 17 and 18 level, impressed for the Super Eagles after coming off the bench in a 2-0 defeat to the Democratic Republic of Congo in a friendly in Vise, Belgium.
"It was an honour to represent my country, I was just buzzing to get on for the last half hour and I was excited," Iwobi told BBC Sport.
My target is to get as many call-ups as I can, get as many games as I can and win many trophies with Nigeria
"I got a few touches and I was excited, even though we lost it felt like I won but I enjoyed the moment."
The 19-year-old is looking to follow in the footsteps of his uncle and former Nigeria captain Austin Jay-Jay Okocha.
"He's a legend in African football and I know I'll have to work hard so people can speak positively about me as well," he said.
"Having him as an uncle helps for inspiration but he didn't achieve his status by being someone's nephew - so I must earn my path.
"My target is to get as many call-ups as I can, get as many games as I can and win many trophies with Nigeria."
After the game against DR Congo on Thursday, Nigeria coach Sunday Oliseh praised what he called a "very confident performance" from Iwobi and admitted that the youngster has caught the eye with his performances so far on the tour of Belgium.
"It makes me feel welcome, I'm confident, motivated, I want to play in the next match - hopefully against Cameroon," Iwobi noted.
"It's been a crazy week for me [after signing a new long-term deal with Arsenal] I'm just enjoying the moment, hope it continues but I am going to enjoy it as it comes."
The Lagos-born youngster has set his sights on breaking into Arsene Wenger's first team squad after penning a new deal with Arsenal even though he is yet to make a competitive senior appearance in any competition.
He impressed for the Gunners during the pre-season, particularly when he was handed a chance to start against Lyon in the Emirates Cup.
"I just want to play for the first team as soon as I can and show the world what I'm able to do," the Arsenal under-21 captain added.
"I have gone through a lot with Arsenal so it will be a dream come true to get a chance." | Arsenal youngster Alex Iwobi says he is delighted to have made his debut for the country of his birth Nigeria and hopes to win many more caps. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Dr McDaid has resigned his position on the grounds of ill health.
He has been a priest since 1968 and a bishop since 2010.
In a statement the Bishop of Down and Connor Noel Treanor said Dr McDaid "has served and supported his priests and all those entrusted to his care with a remarkable capacity for empathy and with a Christian heart".
"I wish Bishop Liam every happiness in his retirement and look forward to our continued friendship in the years ahead," he added. | Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of the Catholic Bishop of Clogher, Liam McDaid. |
Can you summarize the following information? | He marched with pride through the narrow cobbled streets of central Barcelona's Gotico neighbourhood, as the red, yellow and blue Catalan pro-independence flags fluttered in the wind.
"War! War! War!" shouted his commander.
This was a re-enactment of events in the 18th Century, but Ramon feels like he is part of an historic struggle in 2015.
"The Spaniards hate us because we're different," he told me.
"Really?!" I said, as I began to explain that I knew plenty of people in Madrid who definitely did not think that way.
"I don't mean each one of them," replied Ramon.
"Maybe 60 or 70%. You ask them what they think of the Catalans, they'll tell you they're scum, they're pigs."
Such language borders on the extreme, and does not reflect reality.
But perceptions speak volumes when political tension runs high.
And on Catalonia's national day, which was - by no coincidence - also the first day of campaigning ahead of this weekend's crucial regional elections, we met others who had similar thoughts.
"Spain doesn't like us," 15-year-old Julia told me.
"The Spanish government is not friendly with Catalonia," said Eloy, who was born in Galicia, but grew up in Catalonia.
In reality, most of the animosity of the Catalan pro-independence movement is directed at Spain's conservative Popular Party government.
In the words of Francisco Camas Garcia, an analyst at Metroscopia, one of Spain's leading polling companies, "no-one can deny that there is a feeling in Catalonia that they [the Catalans] have been mistreated by the Spanish government".
In private, the Spanish government admits that mistakes have been made over the handling of the Catalan question.
Namely in 2012, when the former Spanish Education Minister, Jose Ignacio Wert, suggested that his department's aim was to make Catalan school children "more Spanish".
But the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy accuses the Catalan authorities of manipulating public opinion and fuelling animosity between Catalonia and the rest of Spain.
It says regional officials have attempted to blackmail Spain into accepting a referendum by threatening a unilateral declaration of independence and attempting to turn this Sunday's regional election into a vote on whether or not Catalonia should break away from Spain.
Madrid, and more accurately people on the right of Spanish politics, are worried.
According to the opinion polls, the majority of Catalans want a referendum.
Catalonia's governing Convergencia party says the vote is a de-facto referendum on independence from Spain.
It has joined forces with the second biggest political party in Catalonia, Esquerra Republicana, to create a single list of candidates, under the banner Together for Yes.
They argue they have been forced to do this because the Spanish government has consistently refused to allow a legally recognised referendum.
Together for Yes says that if it - together with the far-left pro-independence party Candidatures d'Unitat Popular - wins a majority in the Catalan parliament (68 out of 135 seats), then it will have a "democratic mandate" to start a process to create an independent Catalonia.
If Together for Yes fails to gain a majority then it would be tantamount to a serious defeat for the pro-independence movement.
If Together for Yes wins, as polls suggest it will, it plans to start a transitional period lasting up to 18 months, which in theory would lead to a unilateral declaration of independence.
The Spanish government says it will use the country's constitutional court, and other legal means, to block the creation of an "illegitimate" Catalan state.
Catalonia's quarrel with Spain explained
But according to Francisco Camas Garcia of Metroscopia, only about 20% of Catalans support the idea of a unilateral declaration of independence.
So Catalans find themselves victims of a political version of cat and mouse.
By refusing point-blank to even enter into negotiations on the possibility of a referendum on independence, Mr Rajoy hopes the Catalan secessionist movement will run out of momentum.
But the Catalan government says it can use Sunday's election as a vote on independence and will press on regardless of whether Mr Rajoy agrees.
Ultimately Artur Mas, the head of Catalonia's regional government, wants to pressurise Madrid into agreeing to a legal referendum.
"That's the game," proclaimed Guillermo Sanchez, who had his face painted with the thin red and yellow stripes of the Catalan flag at a pro-independence demonstration at the start of the election campaign.
This pro-independence supporter is optimistic that, in the end, the Spanish government will have to sit down and negotiate over a referendum.
However Mr Mas said only this week that he was "sceptical" that would happen.
Some, like flower-shop owner Nieves Sabadell in the town of Hospitalet, which borders Barcelona, believe there are "much more important issues" than independence.
"If half of people have lost their homes, don't have jobs and can't feed their children, they [the politicians] should worry about this."
But even if opinion remains fairly divided over the pros and cons of independence, what the Catalan authorities have successfully cultivated amongst many Catalans is a grievance that they have been denied the right to vote.
Some Spanish politicians, like the new left-wing Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias, oppose Catalan independence but support the idea of a referendum.
For now, Catalans will vote on Sunday.
If the pro-independence parties win a majority of seats in the Catalan parliament, which most opinion polls predict they will, it will be a step into the unknown.
A constitutional crisis is brewing in Spain. | "Spaniards hate us," said Ramon Passolas, with a rifle on his shoulder. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Two video assistant referees will look at goals scored, penalties awarded, red cards and mistaken identities as part of a semi-live trial.
The referee will not be able to review the footage on a pitchside monitor.
Fifa president Gianni Infantino said in April he hoped the 2018 World Cup in Russia would be the first tournament to use the technology.
Video replays were first used at international level during a friendly between Italy and France in September.
It has been tested in six other countries, including in the third-tier United Soccer League in America and the Dutch Cup, with a final decision on its use to be made by 2018.
"Football will not be changed by this and I hope that football will become more honest," said Marco van Basten, former Netherlands striker and Fifa's chief of technical development.
"I am convinced it will be good. It may take some time. Players, referees will have to adapt a bit but it will be good."
Medical staff failed to recognise Diane Thomas was eight months pregnant and in labour when she suffered "horrendous" stomach cramps, the inquest was told.
She was admitted to the Royal Cornwall Hospital but gave birth before getting access to an ultrasound scan.
The hospital said it was reviewing the hours scanning was available.
The inquest at Truro City Hall was told doctors believed Dianne Thomas, who was overweight, was experiencing a miscarriage when she reported suffering bad stomach cramps for two days.
She was admitted to a gynaecological ward the Royal Cornwall Hospital on 30 March but could not access an ultrasound scan until the following day.
In a police interview, Ms Thomas, from Madron, Penzance, said the following morning she reported "really bad pain" but a nurse had told her "if you were in that much pain you would be rolling around on that bed".
She said she went to the toilet and said within 15 minutes she gave birth to Ellie Nicholls in what she described as "a bad shock, like it was all a dream".
Nurses and a doctor described in statements how the baby had been initially stuck in the toilet and had then survived "for a few minutes" but resuscitation efforts failed.
The gestation period was believed to have been between 31 and 33 weeks.
Expert paediatrician Prof Peter Fleming said there was a chance Ellie Nicholls could have survived if her mother had been on a labour suite, but it was "very unlikely" as she had suffered a "very severe infection".
Karen Watkins, a consultant obstetrician from the Royal Cornwall Hospital told the inquest "the hospital recognised, if there had been access to a scan when Diane was admitted, the correct gestation may have been detected".
She said the hospital was looking at extending those scanning hours.
The coroner for Cornwall, Dr Emma Carlyon, concluded that Ellie Nicholls died of natural causes. | Video replays will be used for key refereeing decisions during Italy's friendly with Germany on Tuesday.
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A baby died after being born into a hospital toilet by a 41-year-old woman who did not know she was pregnant, an inquest has heard. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Jesse Lingard, who scored the final goal of the Louis van Gaal era with the winner in the FA Cup final against Crystal Palace, put United ahead before half-time when he ran 40 yards and beat four men to slot home.
League champions Leicester replied when Marouane Fellaini's dreadful back-pass let Jamie Vardy in to round David de Gea and score.
But summer signing Ibrahimovic, 34, typically had the final word with seven minutes to go, rising to meet Antonio Valencia's cross and beat Kasper Schmeichel via the post.
The outspoken Swede had stated beforehand that the shield would be the first trophy he would be bringing home as a United player, and so it proved for the veteran striker.
Leicester had brought Mourinho's second stint in charge of Chelsea to an end with a 2-1 defeat at King Power Stadium in December on their way to the title but this was a much happier occasion for the Portuguese.
Mourinho has even more reason to be cheerful ahead of the start of the new Premier League season next week as United announced before the game that Paul Pogba is set to have a medical before a potential return to Old Trafford for what would be a world record fee.
'Pogba gives Man Utd fear factor' - MOTD analysis
Relive how Manchester United won the Community Shield
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It took less than a minute for the United fans to start chanting their new manager's name, but it is going to take a lot longer for Mourinho to make this team his own, even with his recent purchases.
The Portuguese warned this week it would take time to change his players' mentality after two years of former boss Louis van Gaal's regimented safety-first style, and he was right.
For much of the game they did not look very different to how they did under the Dutchman, with their continuing lack of creativity their most obvious failing, something Lingard's fine individual effort could not disguise.
Their summer signings so far could not change that, especially midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who only appeared from the bench in stoppage time. Along with Pogba, he will be expected to create more chances for United's strikers than they got on Sunday.
Ibrahimovic saw little of the ball in the Leicester box until he scored the winner with only his second effort at goal and his partnership with Wayne Rooney is clearly in its early stages.
At the back, Eric Bailly made a solid enough start but is still learning his lines in English football - he was booked for barging over Leicester striker Jamie Vardy and could easily have had a second yellow card for another clumsy challenge.
There was a bizarre moment in injury time when Juan Mata, himself a 63rd-minute substitute, was replaced by Mkhitaryan, to the Spaniard's apparent displeasure.
N'Golo Kante has left for Chelsea but not much else has changed about champions Leicester, or the tactics that brought them their surprise success last season.
Rather than start with any of his six summer signings, Leicester boss Claudio Ranieri brought in long-serving Andy King to replace Kante in the heart of his midfield, and his side continued to sit back, absorb the opposition's possession and threaten on the break through Vardy's pace.
Like last season, they also threatened from set-pieces, with Shinji Okazaki heading against the bar from an early corner.
It was only at the break, with his side trailing, that Ranieri tried something different, bringing on summer signing Ahmed Musa and Demarai Gray.
Nigeria international Musa, who cost a club record £16m from CSKA Moscow, had already made a splash in pre-season with his performance against Barcelona and he made an instant impact with his part in Leicester's equaliser.
It was Fellaini who played the final ball but Musa had burst forward to put United on the back foot in the first place.
Two more new faces, midfielder Nampalys Mendy and defender Luis Hernandez, came on for the last half hour without making much of a mark but with the Champions League putting extra demands on Ranieri's squad, we are sure to see more of them in the weeks to come.
Manchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic: "It feels good. First official game, we play for the trophy and we win. That's what it's all about, winning trophies.
"This is my 31st trophy, collective trophy, and I'm super happy. This is why I came and hopefully I can win much more than this. Our team is something big going on. We're at the beginning, but we begin with a trophy, so it's a good start."
United manager Jose Mourinho: "The first half performance was much better than the second. The team isn't fit enough yet.
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"When Leicester increased the pace, they had three quick players and changed the game. It's an important victory but we have lots of work to do.
"I would be not ambitious if I said it was a fantastic performance. It wasn't. It's always important to start with a trophy."
Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri: "Congratulations to Manchester United, but also to my players as we made a great match. I thought the minimum we deserved was penalties, but when you play against great champions, this can happen.
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"They knew our counter attacking strength well and did everything to stop us. We're not at 100%, but it's positive."
(Statistics include the Charity Shield, which was the Community Shield's name between 1908 and 2002)
Leicester begin the defence of their Premier League title against newly promoted - and currently manager-less - Hull on Saturday. Mourinho's first competitive game in charge of United comes on Sunday at Bournemouth.
Match ends, Leicester City 1, Manchester United 2.
Second Half ends, Leicester City 1, Manchester United 2.
Corner, Leicester City. Conceded by Antonio Valencia.
Attempt blocked. Demarai Gray (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.
Substitution, Manchester United. Henrikh Mkhitaryan replaces Juan Mata because of an injury.
Attempt blocked. Daniel Drinkwater (Leicester City) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez.
Corner, Leicester City. Conceded by Eric Bailly.
Offside, Manchester United. David de Gea tries a through ball, but Zlatan Ibrahimovic is caught offside.
Foul by Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United).
Demarai Gray (Leicester City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Substitution, Leicester City. Leonardo Ulloa replaces Robert Huth.
Substitution, Manchester United. Morgan Schneiderlin replaces Wayne Rooney.
Juan Mata (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Demarai Gray (Leicester City).
Corner, Leicester City. Conceded by Marcos Rojo.
Goal! Leicester City 1, Manchester United 2. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) header from very close range to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Antonio Valencia with a cross.
Attempt missed. Ahmed Musa (Leicester City) header from very close range is just a bit too high. Assisted by Robert Huth with a headed pass.
Substitution, Leicester City. Jeffrey Schlupp replaces Christian Fuchs.
Attempt blocked. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) right footed shot from the left side of the six yard box is blocked. Assisted by Wayne Rooney.
Corner, Manchester United. Conceded by Demarai Gray.
Foul by Eric Bailly (Manchester United).
Demarai Gray (Leicester City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Corner, Manchester United. Conceded by Daniel Drinkwater.
Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Juan Mata (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Jamie Vardy (Leicester City).
Attempt missed. Luis Hernández (Leicester City) right footed shot from long range on the right is high and wide to the left.
Eric Bailly (Manchester United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Eric Bailly (Manchester United).
Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Substitution, Manchester United. Marcus Rashford replaces Anthony Martial.
Substitution, Manchester United. Marcos Rojo replaces Luke Shaw.
Attempt saved. Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Marouane Fellaini.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Substitution, Manchester United. Juan Mata replaces Jesse Lingard because of an injury.
Substitution, Leicester City. Luis Hernández replaces Danny Simpson.
Substitution, Leicester City. Nampalys Mendy replaces Andy King.
Delay in match Jesse Lingard (Manchester United) because of an injury.
Substitution, Manchester United. Ander Herrera replaces Michael Carrick.
Foul by Eric Bailly (Manchester United). | Jose Mourinho began his reign as Manchester United manager with a trophy as Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored a late header to beat Leicester in the FA Community Shield at Wembley. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Christopher Weatherhead, 22, was studying at Northampton University when he allegedly took part in the campaign.
The court heard Anonymous targeted companies who opposed internet piracy but later attacked PayPal after it refused to process Wikileaks payments.
Mr Weatherhead, from Northampton, denies a charge of conspiracy.
He has pleaded not guilty to conspiring to impair the operation of computers between 1 August 2010 and 22 January 2011.
MasterCard, Visa, Ministry of Sound, the British Recorded Music Industry and the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry were also hit.
The jury at Southwark Crown Court were told Ashley Rhodes, 27, from Camberwell, south London; Peter Gibson, 24, from Hartlepool; and an 18-year-old male who cannot be named for legal reasons have already pleaded guilty to the charge.
Mr Patel said Gibson had initially suggested attacking musician Lily Allen's website because of her overt anti-piracy stance but changed his mind, saying he did not wish to "attack artists".
Sandip Patel, prosecuting, said the group caused PayPal "enormous economic harm".
He said they initially targeted companies who were known to oppose internet piracy but later switched to attacking PayPal after it refused to process payments on behalf of the controversial Wikileaks website, founded by Julian Assange.
Mr Patel said PayPal was chosen after it refused, in December 2010, to process payments for the Wau Holland Foundation, which was raising money to keep Wikileaks going.
The prosecutor said Anonymous were "hacktivists" who believed copyright should not apply to the internet.
He said their attacks, codenamed Operation Payback, began as a campaign against the music industry and those who took part in action against the Pirate Bay website which had attempted to distribute music in breach of copyright laws.
Mr Patel said they used distributed denial of service, or DDoS, which flooded the targets computers with enormous amounts of online requests.
Target websites would crash and users would be directed to a page displaying the message: "You've tried to bite the Anonymous hand. You angered the hive and now you are being stung."
Mr Patel said: "This case, simply put, is about hackers who used the internet to attack and disable computer systems - colloquially described as cyber-attackers or vandals."
He said Mr Weatherhead, who used the online name Nerdo, posted plans on an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel encouraging an attack on PayPal.
"It is the prosecution case that Christopher Weatherhead, the defendant, is a cyber-attacker and that he, and others like him, waged a sophisticated and orchestrated campaign of online attacks that paralysed a series of targeted computer systems belonging to companies to which they took issue with, for whatever reason, and those attacks caused unprecedented harm," Mr Patel added.
He said PayPal was the victim of a series of attacks "which caused considerable damage to its reputation and loss of trade".
More than 100 workers from PayPal's parent company, eBay, spent three weeks working on issues related to the attacks, said Mr Patel.
He said PayPal also had to pay for more software and hardware to defend against similar attacks in the future and he said the total cost to the firm was estimated at £3.5m.
Mr Patel said the case showed the "dark side" of the internet and he said Anonymous "split into organised and co-ordinated attacks almost along military lines".
The BPI was the subject of an attack in September 2010, leading it to pay out £3,996 for improved online security while the Ministry of Sound paid out £9,000 after its four websites were targeted in October 2010.
The court was told the IRC server used by Anonymous was called AnonOps, and he described Mr Weatherhead as being part of a "small cabal of leaders" and the network administrator for the group.
Mr Patel said one of the websites created by the group was also set up, paid for and run by the defendant using the fake name Moses Gustavsson.
He said Mr Weatherhead used an internet service provider (ISP) called Heihachi, which is based in Russia, which Mr Patel described as a "safe haven" for renegade ISPs.
Mr Weatherhead allegedly boasted that Heihachi permitted anything, even child pornography.
The jury was told Mr Weatherhead discussing attacking the Bank of America and the law firm GM Legal, which was involved in anti-piracy work.
The court heard that Mr Weatherhead's home was raided on 27 January 2011 and computer equipment were seized.
Mr Patel said Mr Weatherhead's security passwords were variations on the words "Nerdo is the best (or worst) hacker in the world".
He claimed the computer belonged to his sister, Laura.
The trial continues. | A student attacked the PayPal website as part of a concerted effort by the Anonymous "hacktivists" that cost the company £3.5m, a court has heard. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Lawyers for an Iranian asylum seeker argued that PNG's designation as an offshore processing centre was illegal under the Migration Act.
But the judges rejected the claims.
Conditions in the camp, and in another centre on Nauru, have been the subject of stringent criticism from both UN agencies and human rights groups.
The Iranian man arrived on Australia's Christmas Island by boat last July. He was then transferred to the Manus Island Detention Centre .
His lawyers also claimed that his removal from Christmas Island was illegal.
''It's devastating for our client,'' his lawyer Mark Robinson said. ''It means that he has to remain in Papua New Guinea in terrible conditions."
The much-criticised policy was introduced by the Australian government in 2012.
It has the broad support of both of Australia's main political parties.
But rights groups have questioned whether Australia is adequately protecting vulnerable people.
Riots have broken out at the Manus centre on several occasions.
The ruling comes as a victory for the current conservative Australian government, says the BBC's Jon Donnison in Sydney.
The government has have championed the policy and has been largely successful in reducing the number of asylum seekers, he says.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott welcomed the court's decision.
"We haven't had a successful people smuggling venture to Australia in almost six months and obviously I'm pleased those policies have passed muster," he said.
"This is a government that is determined to stop the boats so we've put a range of policies in place."
Immigration spokeswoman Sarah Hanson-Young maintained the Manus Island detention centre was not safe for asylum seekers.
"Dumping refugees in unsafe conditions on Manus Island may be constitutional but it's certainly not morally acceptable and is still in breach of international law," she said.
"What remains true is that these camps of cruelty are inhumane, unsafe and untenable for refugees." | Australia's High Court has ruled that sending asylum seekers to be processed offshore in Papua New Guinea does not breach the constitution. |
Summarize the provided section. | The musical is set to open at the Victoria Palace Theatre in November after a hugely successful Broadway run.
Delfont Mackintosh Theatres said it will have a paperless ticket system "to combat the unauthorised profiteering of third party resellers".
Theatregoers will be asked simply to present their payment card for entry.
Hamilton was created and written by Lin-Manuel Miranda and tells the story of America's birth and founding father Alexander Hamilton using rap, R&B and hip hop.
Previews of the London production begin on 21 November with performances scheduled through to June 2018.
Priority tickets go on sale from 16 January and tickets go on general sale 30 January.
In a statement, Delfont Mackintosh Theatres said the ticketing measures were "in order to protect patrons from paying highly inflated prices".
"Upon arrival at the theatre on the day of the performance, patrons will be asked to swipe the payment card they used to originally purchase their tickets to gain admission into the theatre," the company said in a statement.
"Patrons wishing to pay by cash can only do so once the Box Office at the Victoria Palace Theatre reopens in the autumn."
The Hamilton website states ticket holders will also have to present photographic ID at the theatre in addition to the original payment card.
Last year, Hamilton dominated the Tony Awards, winning 11 trophies including best musical and lead actor.
It hit the headlines in November after the US vice-president elect Mike Pence was booed by the theatre audience after one performance in New York.
The announcement comes in the same week Robbie Williams's management team was found to be placing tickets directly on to resale ticketing websites at higher prices.
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | Physical tickets will not be issued for the London production of Hamilton in an attempt to combat touting, its producers have announced. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Mohammed Ali Ahmed and Zakaria Boufassil, both 26, are accused of giving £3,000 to Mohamed Abrini.
They face one count of arranging the availability of money for use in terrorism on or before 7 July 2015.
Mr Ahmed is also charged with the preparation of terrorist acts, with a third defendant, Soumaya Boufassil, 29.
The two men are accused of meeting Mr Abrini - referred to by Belgian police as "the man in the hat" - at Small Heath Park in Birmingham last year between 9 and 16 July, when it is alleged they gave him the money.
Mr Ahmed and Ms Boufassil are charged with the preparation of terrorist acts between 1 January 2015 and 8 April 2016.
Mr Ahmed is a British national, while both Mr Boufassil and his sister, Ms Boufassil, are Belgian-Moroccans. They have all been living in Birmingham and were arrested on 14 and 15 April.
The two men appeared at the Old Bailey on Thursday via video link from Wandsworth prison.
Ms Boufassil was excused from attending the hearing.
The defendants were remanded in custody and ordered to appear at the Old Bailey on 4 October for a plea and case management hearing.
Mr Abrini, who is in custody over the attack at Brussels airport in March which killed 16 people, is also a suspect in last year's attacks on Paris which killed 130. | Two men accused of giving money to a suspect in the Brussels and Paris terrorist attacks when he visited England are to stand trial in November. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | The former Newcastle and Fulham midfielder, 44, joined the League One strugglers on Wednesday, replacing temporary manager Chris Brass.
Clark kept Kilmarnock in the top tier via the play-offs last season, and leaves them in sixth place.
"The year I had at Kilmarnock has shown everyone I can manage, I'm a good manager," Clark told BBC Manchester.
The ex-Huddersfield and Birmingham City manager took over Blackpool in 2014, but three wins in 33 matches saw them relegated from the Championship.
"It was a tough six months at Blackpool. For a few months after that there was a time I considered not continuing in football, it took a lot out of me. It wasn't the real Lee Clark," he added.
"I've got my mojo back - I have thoroughly enjoyed the year I've had with Kilmarnock, they've done a lot for me and now Bury can reap rewards of that."
Clark joins Bury with the club two points from safety, having played two games more than their nearest rivals Port Vale.
"I've been in a relegation battle at Birmingham which we got through, and the same at Kilmarnock."
"There'll be no knee-jerk reactions, we will deal with this in a cool, calm and calculated way, to understand the situation, survive and build for the future."
"I know this league from my time with Huddersfield, where I had a lot of success."
The ex-Sunderland player believes he can be successful again in the third tier.
"How do I become successful at Bury? The players. I have to get them to buy into what I'm about. The players at Kilmarnock got me this move, they produced the results to get from bottom of the table to the top six."
"The short-term goal is to win as many games as possible to stay in the league, and then the next objective is to challenge at the other end at the end of the table. If you don't have ambition, don't come into the game."
Clark will take charge of his first match on Saturday, with the Shakers travelling to fellow relegation candidates Chesterfield.
"I want the lads to be extremely fit. Everyday we will train as hard as we can so we can replicate it on match day. If the players give me that, and we don't get the results, then there is nothing we can do. The club deserves this, and if they do, they have my total support."
Relatives say the miners have been missing since Friday.
They fear they may have been killed by a gang trying to take control of a wildcat mine near the town of Tumeremo.
The reports were initially dismissed by the local governor, who accused the opposition of stirring up trouble.
"So far there's not any indication of any person killed or missing," said Bolivar state Governor Francisco Rangel of the governing socialist PSUV party on Monday.
"What happened there, according to the security forces, was another clash between armed gangs that are trying to control mining activities in the area," added Mr Rangel.
Venezuelan air force troops have been searching for the bodies in the remote jungle area.
"We won't rest until we find those responsible for these acts, which in the eyes of all Venezuelans are abominable," said Mr Padrino.
The missing miners worked at the Atenas gold mine. Reports of their disappearance first emerged on Saturday when worried relatives reported that their loved ones had not returned from work.
The number of missing miners soon grew from two to 28.
The families blocked a road in Tumeremo to demand an investigation. With tempers running high at the roadblock, reports soon spread about a deadly stand-off at the mine.
Local media quoted "eyewitnesses" who said the discovery of a significant gold deposit had pitched the miners against members of a gang who wanted to lay their hands on the lucrative find.
The gang members allegedly opened fire on the miners and later forced the survivors to load the bodies onto a lorry.
There are conflicting reports as to where the bodies were taken, with some locals saying they were driven further into the mine and others alleging they were dismembered by chainsaw and disposed of on land belonging to the gang leader.
Opposition lawmaker Americo de Grazia accused Mr Rangel of trying to cover up the alleged massacre.
He compared Mr Rangel to the governor of the Mexican state of Guerrero, where 43 students disappeared in September 2014. | New Bury boss Lee Clark says he has his "mojo back" after his spell at Scottish Premiership side Kilmarnock.
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Venezuela's Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez has said the armed forces are determined to find out what happened with 28 gold miners reported to have been killed. |
Summarize the content provided below. | The FAW made a post-tax profit of £891,000 for the year ending 30 June, 2016.
Turnover for the year was £21m, an increase of £10.5m (102%) on the previous year.
The financial year included the Euro 2016 finals in France, up to and including the round of 16.
The quarter-finals and semi-finals of the competition occurred in July after the end of the business year.
FAW chief executive Jonathan Ford previously said Wales' run to the semi-finals of Euro 2016 earned a £3m profit for the association.
Ford is pleased with the profit for the period 2015-16 and said it was "imperative" to invest the money in new facilities.
"We hope to use that money, together with grants we have available and together with other money we may be able to get our hands on, to continue to improve facilities," Ford told BBC Wales Sport.
"They're probably the one thing throughout this country where we are a little bit behind.
"Our commitment to improving facilities throughout Wales, especially around the areas of national development and training centres, is clearly going to be a focus for us over the coming couple of years.
"Our objective is to get more people playing football and as a result of that more people playing football to a higher standard." | The Football Association of Wales will re-invest the profit it made in 2015-16 to improve facilities, says chief executive Jonathan Ford. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | Simon Wood, 54, from Potters Bar in Hertfordshire, took his own life in August 2013 after he was accused of sexually assaulting children.
He was hit by a train 11 days before he was due to appear in a UK court charged with abuse in Africa and the UK.
BA, which denies liability, called the accusations "shocking and horrifying".
Live: British Airways recognises 'impact'
Lawyers claimed the airline is responsible because the alleged victims were assaulted by Mr Wood while he was on stopovers.
A mother of two of the alleged victims, aged nine and 16, said Mr Wood took them all to the Intercontinental Hotel in Nairobi during stopovers in Kenya and showered her children with gifts.
The woman said he would bathe her children and others and also take them out.
Mr Wood had been charged with one count of indecently assaulting a girl under 16, two counts of making indecent photographs of a child and one count of possessing indecent images of a child.
An inquest in July 2014 ruled that he had taken his own life following the accusations, which included allegations that he abused children in Africa while doing voluntary work for the airline.
In Africa he allegedly molested girls between the ages of five and 13 in schools and orphanages in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania between 2003 and 2013, law firm Leigh Day said in July 2014.
In a statement, BA said: "The allegations against Simon Wood have been shocking and horrifying.
"Though we do not bear any legal responsibility for Simon Wood's actions, we recognise the impact they had on his victims and the distress and suffering they caused.
"This recognition is reflected in the agreement we have made with the victims' representatives." | British Airways has agreed to pay an undisclosed amount to children who were sexually abused by one of its pilots in East Africa. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | Southend News Network's song "Dartford Tolls" has been viewed more than one million times on Facebook and YouTube.
Written by the site's creator, the ditty slams the Essex to Kent crossing's regular traffic jams and "extortionate" toll charges.
Southend News Network's "chief reporter" said the aim was to raise "as much money as possible" for charity.
Follow live updates on Essex news stories
The anonymous figure said he came up with the idea for a Christmas song after writing another tune earlier in the year called "Sometimes Our Pier's On Fire".
"I always try to base my fake stories around things people are passionate about," the "chief reporter" said.
"On Facebook and Twitter, people go nuts about the crossing - being held up, being charged so much.
"The whole song is based on the premise that the crossing should have been free after a few years. But here we are in 2016 and it costs more to use it than ever before."
The site teamed up with singer Annie Humphrey, who recorded the track, and a swear-word riddled version has so far clocked up 1.2 million hits.
Profits from the "clean" version, which has been released as a download, will be split between the British Heart Foundation and Shelter.
The "chief reporter" said he was "aware it would be a monumental task" to reach the number one spot in the charts.
"We're up against Sir Cliff [Richard] and Sir Terry [Wogan]!" he said.
"Southend News Network was started as a joke blog and I had no idea that it would reach this level.
"At least I have a pop career to fall back on now - hopefully."
Shakespeare depicted Richard as physically and mentally grotesque, a view rejected by modern supporters.
When his skeleton was found under a Leicester car park in 2012, the marked curve in its vertebrae was the first clue it could be the infamous monarch.
But the University of Leicester believe his spine's subtly spiral twist could have been disguised with clothing.
After Richard III died at the battle of Bosworth in 1485 and was hastily buried under a Leicester church, his name was blackened by the new Tudor dynasty.
But the University of Leicester said the study meant "now everyone can explore the true shape of one of history's most famous spinal columns".
The findings, published in The Lancet, detail how CT scans of the vertebrae were used to create accurate copies from a 3D printer.
Dr Piers Mitchell, from the University of Cambridge, explained how these showed the exact nature of the curve, known as a scoliosis.
"The bones are all a slightly different shape at the most curved part of his spine (compared to) that you would expect to see.
"We have been able to put those bones back together because the only way those bones could fit together in life would be in the form of a scoliosis," he said.
University of Leicester osteoarchaelogist Dr Jo Appleby, of the university's School of Archaeology and Ancient History, concluded: "Although the scoliosis looks dramatic, it probably did not cause a major physical deformity.
"This is because he had a well-balanced curve. The condition would have meant that his trunk was short in comparison to the length of his limbs, and his right shoulder would have been slightly higher than the left, but this could have been disguised by custom-made armour and by having a good tailor.
"There is no evidence that Richard had a limp as his curve was well balanced and his leg bones were normal and symmetric."
Dr Phil Stone, chairman of the Richard III Society, said: "History tells us that Richard III was a great warrior.
"Clearly, he was little inconvenienced by his spinal problem and accounts of his appearance, written when he was alive, tell that he was 'of person and bodily shape comely enough'". | A spoof news site has released a charity song for Christmas, mocking an infamous river crossing.
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Richard III's bent spine would have left him inches shorter, but able to function well, researchers have found. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | Only 49.8% of them are educated to chemistry degree standard - which is the worst figure in the UK.
In response, the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) launched a campaign on Wednesday to give students in Wales a world class science education.
The organisation is campaigning for the Welsh government to raise standards by 2020.
The RSC wants every chemistry pupil over 14 to be taught by a specialist teacher and all primary schools to have access to one.
"I was really lucky to have specialist chemistry teachers at my comprehensive school and tertiary college in Swansea," said the RSC's Jon Edwards.
"But many Welsh science students don't have that luck, their teachers need more support to be confident and knowledgeable about chemistry.
"Otherwise wise we risk falling even further behind both the rest of the UK and many countries around the world."
The Welsh government said it has introduced financial incentives to attract students to teaching science.
A spokesman said: "We want to support and encourage our best graduates to train to teach in Wales.
"That's why we've put in place new financial incentives of up to £20,000 for top postgraduate students who want to train to teach priority subjects such as maths, physics and chemistry in Wales.
"These incentives will continue to strengthen the quality of initial teacher training in Wales by encouraging the most talented graduates with high level subject specialism to enter teaching." | Fewer than half of chemistry teachers in Welsh secondary schools have degrees in the subject, it has been revealed. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Health Minister Maggie De Block said current rules requiring pills to be given within 20km (12 miles) of a reactor should be increased to 100km.
Belgium's neighbours have criticised the state of its nuclear reactors.
However, the minister said the change was as a result of the March 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.
An earthquake led to a tsunami and all three reactor cores largely melted down.
"Every country has updated its plans for a nuclear emergency," Ms De Block told Belgian TV.
Iodine tablets help to reduce the damage radiation does to the body after a nuclear accident.
People living near the Fukushima nuclear plant were handed the pills after a tsunami caused a radiation leak in 2011.
Radioactive iodine gathers in the thyroid gland and there it releases its energy and damages the tissue.
Ultimately this can culminate in cancer.
Taking the tablets fills the thyroid with stable iodine so there's no room for the radioactive material.
Of course they offer no protection against other radioactive elements such as caesium-137.
Health effects of radiation exposure
Germany calls for temporary nuclear shutdown in Belgium
Belgium has seven reactors, at Doel and Tihange, and a research reactor at Mol. But the advice also takes into account reactors in neighbouring countries including the Netherlands, which has a reactor at Borssele close to the Belgian border.
Ms De Block said pills would be given to the whole population because if a 100km circle was drawn from all the reactors in the region there was not one square centimetre of Belgium that was not covered.
The Dutch government updated its policy on iodine tablets last month, so that pregnant women and under-eighteens are given the pills within 100km of the Borssele and Doel reactors.
Earlier this month Belgium refused a German request to shut down two of its oldest reactors temporarily because of defects found in their pressure vessels.
Environment Minister Barbara Hendricks called for the Doel 3 and Tihange 2 reactors to be taken offline because of a report by Germany's independent Reactor Safety Commission.
They were temporarily shut in 2012 when defects were found in the walls of the reactors' pressure vessels.
Belgian Green MP Jean-Marc Nollet welcomed the proposals for the whole population to be given the pills, but said it was not enough.
The risk would not disappear if Belgians were given pills, he said. The health, environmental and economic consequences of a nuclear accident would remain.
The change is expected to be finalised in June and pills will be handed out next year.
Manchester's Second City Crossing, running from near the Town Hall at St Peter's Square to Victoria Station, is the final part of a £1.5bn transport expansion plan which began in 2009.
Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) said its opening was "historic" and the "culmination of years of hard work".
TfGM bosses have acknowledged the works have caused major disruption for commuters and local businesses.
The Second City Crossing's first phase opened between Victoria and Exchange Square - the area of Manchester city centre that faced the brunt of the 1996 IRA bomb - in December 2015.
Since work to expand Metrolink began in 2009, the network has trebled in original size and has become the largest light rail network in the UK.
Councillor Andrew Fender, chair of TfGM's committee, said the completed route would offer a "fantastic new view of historic Manchester landmarks".
Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester City Council, said it highlighted "how much the city has changed in such a short space of time, and represents a major milestone in Manchester's continuing development and growth".
About 250 drivers have undergone training on the new route.
The line was built as part of the government's £1.5bn investment in tram, bus, rail and cycle routes across Greater Manchester.
Source: TfGM and Greater Manchester Museum of Transport | The Belgian government has agreed to distribute iodine pills to the country's entire population as a nuclear safety precaution.
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A new £165m tram line, which took three years to build, is opening. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Chief executive of Birmingham's Perry Beeches Academy Trust Liam Nolan is stepping aside so the trust "can move forward", staff have been told.
Two free schools due to be set up by the trust have been "paused".
The Education Funding Agency criticised the trust in March for "significant weakness in financial management".
Information from a whistleblower prompted the agency investigation, which found an additional salary of £160,000 was paid to Mr Nolan, over two years, through a third-party agreement - on top of his £120,000-a-year salary.
It was issued with a financial notice to improve.
More on this story plus others from Birmingham
The Department for Education said interim governance arrangements to ensure the schools' management had been put in place. The existing governing body is reported to be stepping down.
The academy and free school trust, which has also been praised by Education Secretary Nicky Morgan and her predecessor Michael Gove, runs five schools and looks after 2,400 pupils.
Mr Nolan told staff in a message, that he had resigned "to allow... necessary changes required to move the trust forward".
He had "thoroughly enjoyed his time at Perry Beeches since joining in 2007". It said he "would like it known that... it has been a privilege to work alongside colleagues, families and young people in the schools".
It added that Mr Nolan "would like to take this opportunity to thank you all for the enormous support during his time at Perry Beeches" and to wish everyone "the very best" for the future.
A statement by the academies trust said it had created "a new executive board which includes head teachers from all the schools to ensure no distraction from the core business of educating its pupils and helping them reach their full potential".
It added: "A new Transition Board of Trustees has been put in place to continue with governance responsibilities and work closely with the DfE and Education Funding Agency
"The trust has been working closely with the EFA in relations to concerns surrounding Governance and Financial Irregularities following last years investigation and Financial Notice to Improve. An Action Plan has been put in place with the support of the EFA to address all concerns."
Two planned free schools, Perry Beeches Primary I and Perry Beeches VI, have been placed on "pause" by education minister Lord Nash.
The DfE said in a statement: "Our priority is ensuring the education of pupils is not disrupted.
"Perry Beeches Academy Trust (PBAT) has already put in place interim governance arrangements to ensure the ongoing leadership and management of the schools are not affected.
"The Regional Schools Commissioner, Pank Patel, is working with the trust to secure future, permanent, governance arrangements. It would be inappropriate to discuss matters regarding the future of PBAT and its schools at this stage."
The development comes just a few days after the government withdrew its plans to require all schools to become academies.
Conservative backbench MPs, councillors and opposition politicians had campaigned against the plan. Head teachers and education establishment figures also criticised the notion that schools would be forced to make the change in management structure.
In March, the academy chain was told to pay back £118,000 in government funding.
The trust claimed about £2.8m from the EFA for free school meals, but only kept limited records of its entitlements.
An EFA report said this was a breach of government guidelines. The trust said it was a genuine administrative error. | The head of a flagship multi-academy trust praised by the prime minister has resigned, leaving its five schools with an uncertain future. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | The 42-year-old was found dead with stab wounds in a property on Hazel Avenue at about 16:15 on Thursday.
A woman, 42, is in a stable condition in Blackpool Victoria Hospital after also being stabbed, police said.
A 23-year-old man and two boys, aged 15 and 16, all from Liverpool, are being questioned in custody. | Three people, including a 15-year-old boy, have been arrested on suspicion of murder after a man was stabbed in Darwen. |
Write a summary of this document. | Students, political activists and protesters - some as young as 14 - have vanished without a trace, according to a new report by Amnesty International.
Many are alleged to have been held for months and often kept blindfolded and handcuffed for the entire period.
Egypt's government has denied it uses enforced disappearances and torture.
More than 1,000 people have been killed and 40,000 are believed to have been jailed since President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi led the military's overthrow of Mohammed Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected head of state, in 2013.
Amnesty's Middle East and North Africa director, Philip Luther, said enforced disappearances had become a "key instrument of state policy" under Mr Sisi and his Interior Minister, Magdy Abdul Ghaffar, who took office in March 2015.
Citing local non-governmental organisations, Amnesty said that on average three to four people per day had been seized, usually when heavily armed security forces led by the National Security Agency (NSA) stormed their homes.
Hundreds of people were thought to be held at the NSA's offices, inside the interior ministry's headquarters at Cairo's Lazoughly Square.
Mr Luther said the report exposed collusion between the security services and judicial authorities, who he alleged had been "prepared to lie to cover their tracks or failed to investigate torture allegations, making them complicit in serious human rights violations".
One of the cases in the report is that of 14-year-old Mazen Mohamed Abdallah, who was taken from his home in the Nasser City district of Cairo by NSA agents on 30 September and accused of being a member of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood and participating in unauthorised protests.
Mazen said that after he denied the charges, interrogators repeatedly raped him with a wooden stick in order to force him to "memorise" a false confession, applied electric shocks to his genitals and other parts of his body, and threatened to arrest his parents if he retracted the confession.
The boy retracted the confession when questioned by a prosecutor, but was still charged and only released from custody on 31 January to await trial, Amnesty said.
Another of the cases featured in the report is that of Italian student Giulio Regeni.
The 28-year-old Cambridge University PhD student was found dead on a roadside on the outskirts of Cairo in February, his body bearing signs of torture.
The Egyptian authorities have denied any involvement in his killing, but Amnesty said its report had found "clear similarities" between his injuries and those of Egyptians who had died in custody.
Following the publication of the report on Wednesday, the Egyptian foreign ministry issued a statement accusing Amnesty of being a "non-neutral organisation motivated by political stances aimed at tarnishing the image of Egypt".
It said the ministry "would not comment" further, but added that Amnesty's reporting was one-sided and expressed "the viewpoints of individuals and parties hostile to the Egyptian state, while ignoring the Egyptian judiciary's handling of these cases". | Egypt's security services have forcibly made hundreds of people disappear and tortured them in the past year to try to tackle dissent, a rights group says. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | Hagfish are eel-shaped fish, sometimes known as "slime eels". They have a skull but no jaw or spine and they secrete slime when stressed.
The 3,400kg of hagfish were to be exported to South Korea, where they are considered a delicacy.
No-one was injured in the accident.
However, one lane of Highway 101 south of Depoe Bay was closed while the clean-up took place.
The local authorities declared on social media that the highway had been "slimed" and tweeted photos from the scene. | A highway in the US state of Oregon has been "slimed" after a truck full of hagfish overturned, covering cars and the tarmac with the animals and the sticky goo they produce. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | The Chancellor George Osborne announced in his Spending Review that The Factory Manchester will receive £9m a year in 2018/19 and 2019/20.
Building work on the project, which incorporates art and culture from theatre to TV, starts in 2016.
Mr Osborne said the spending is part of the Northern Powerhouse scheme.
A spokeswoman for the Manchester project said it is hoped the support will continue after 2020.
Mr Osborne said: "We have backed The Factory with significant investment because we know it will provide an outstanding new arts venue to be enjoyed by people of all ages and backgrounds for generations to come."
The Factory, which received planning permission in July, forms a part of the new St John's neighbourhood on the 15-acre former Granada site. | Plans to convert the former home of soap opera Coronation Street into a "flagship arts building" have received government backing. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | The Conservatives at Westminster had pledged to end the support.
The UK government has also announced support packages for offshore wind and marine energy projects.
Western Isles MP Angus MacNeil and Scottish Renewables have criticised the government for not allowing developers of islands wind farms to bid for funds.
Scotland's Minister for Business, Innovation and Energy, Paul Wheelhouse, said he was "extremely disappointed" and "angered" by the UK government's handling of a "vitally important issue".
The UK government said the consultation showed that it had listened to representations from Scotland and the renewable energy industry on the matter of subsidies.
The consultation forms part of the UK government's wider announcement "to reaffirm" an earlier commitment to spend £730m of annual support to renewable electricity projects over the current term of this parliament.
In the announcement, it has also set out further details for a new round of support packages from a scheme called Contracts for Difference (CfD).
The UK government said this would see companies compete for the first £290m-worth of contracts for less advanced technologies, such as offshore wind and marine renewables.
The consultation on subsidies for onshore wind projects, which runs until the end of January, asks three questions.
They are:
UK Business and Energy Secretary Greg Clark said: "The renewables industry is a strong success story for Scotland thanks to UK government support, and this latest auction will enable many more companies to access funding.
"Last year alone a record £13bn was invested across the UK with Scotland continuing to benefit significantly.
"For onshore wind projects on remote islands, I have listened to partners and parliamentarians in Scotland and that's why I am launching a consultation to determine what support this technology should be eligible for."
But Mr MacNeil described the omission of developers of onshore wind on islands as "an epic kick in the teeth".
He said: "The only glimmer of hope is that Greg Clark promised me this morning that he will visit the Outer Hebrides and will launch an inquiry into the feasibility of remote island wind.
"I hope this will not just be a calming exercise to dissipate people's righteous indignation at this decision by the UK Tory government, on what is a perfect day for burying bad news," added Mr MacNeil, referring to the result of the US election.
Scottish Renewables, an organisation representing the development of the renewable energy sector in Scotland, has also criticised the UK government's announcement.
Chief executive Niall Stuart said: "We've waited a long time for this announcement, which signals further significant investment in the UK's offshore wind sector.
"However, developers and communities on the Scottish remote islands will be bitterly disappointed that government has put off a decision on allowing projects on Scotland's islands to compete for long-term contracts for renewable energy.
"After years of work on this issue, and many ministerial pledges to resolve it, we still seem no further forward to unlocking investment on Scotland's islands - home to some of the best wind, wave and tidal resources in Europe."
Energy minister Mr Wheelhouse said: "The Scottish government and the island councils asked the UK government for a meeting of the Scottish Island Renewable Delivery Forum on numerous occasions in the last year but received no response.
"At no time was it suggested there would be a further consultation. We now call upon the secretary of state to reconvene the forum and have the courtesy to explain this decision to those affected in person."
He said the Scottish government has also made Mr Clark aware of the "tight timeline" for the actions needed to allow island wind projects and the transmission links to be built. | The UK government has announced a consultation on whether to give subsidies to onshore wind development in the Western and Northern Isles. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Sir Michael Wilshaw said a return to selection at 11 years old would be a "profoundly retrograde step" that would lead to sliding standards.
He spoke out after reports that Prime Minister Theresa May favours changing the law so new grammars can open.
England's Education Secretary Justine Greening is looking into the issue.
Supporters of grammar schools say that children from poor backgrounds are helped to make the most of their potential because entry to such schools is on the basis of raw ability.
But many argue that, in fact, the vast majority of those doing well in entrance tests are children whose parents have paid for them to be privately tutored outside school.
In a speech to London Councils' education conference, Sir Michael praised the success of schools in the capital saying they had undergone an "amazing transformation" and lead the way in "narrowing the attainment gap between rich and poor".
"It has maintained its status as the top performing region across all key stages when it comes to the performance of children eligible for free school meals," he said.
The soaring success of London schools made "a mockery of the claim that opening up many grammar schools is the key to unlocking the potential of disadvantaged children and to boosting social mobility," he said.
"If grammar schools are the great answer, why aren't there more in London?
"If they are such a good thing for poor children, then why are poor children here in the capital doing so much better than their counterparts in those parts of the country that operate selection?"
He said he appreciated that many grammar schools did a "fine job", but added that their record of admitting children from non-middle class backgrounds was "pretty woeful".
"The notion that the poor stand to benefit from the return of grammar schools strikes me as quite palpable tosh and nonsense - and is very clearly refuted by the London experience."
He cited figures showing the under-representation of poor pupils in grammar schools.
In Bexley, he said grammar schools had 9% of pupils on free school meals, compared to 28% in non-selective schools.
In Sutton, where five out of 14 schools are grammars, the proportion is about 7% in grammar schools and 25% in non-selective schools.
In a BBC interview this weekend, Mrs May did not answer directly a question about whether she planned to bring back grammar schools.
But she said Ms Greening was looking at the issue of new grammar schools as well as other areas of education policy.
Labour banned new grammars in 1998 amid concerns they were dominated by middle-class pupils whose parents gave them a head-start with private tutoring.
England's first "new" grammar for 50 years in Sevenoaks, Kent, was only approved last year as an "annexe" to an existing school using a loophole in the law.
Shadow Education Secretary Angela Rayner described Sir Michael's comments as "an embarrassing rebuke" for the Conservatives.
"The Tories should be concentrating instead on raising standards in all schools and improving education for all our children, regardless of their backgrounds.
"They are failing to do so. But they want to return to a system in which children were branded as failures at the age of 11 and which only increased division in our society. | The idea that poor children will benefit from a return of grammar schools is "tosh" and "nonsense", says the outgoing chief inspector of Ofsted. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The 23-year-old was the only competitor to score more than 90 points out of a possible 100 in Cardrona, New Zealand, opening with 90.20 before posting 93.40.
He finished ahead of Norway's Oystein Braaten (89.80) and American Joss Christensen (87.20).
Earlier this month, Woods won the New Zealand Freeski Open.
In January, Mammoth in California will host the second of the five World Cup events, followed by Park City in Utah, Phoenix Park in South Korea and Silvaplana in Switzerland.
The inquiry found that two officials on "a frolic on their own" approved the landing of a private plane at the base, a minister said.
The Gupta family flew guests from India last month - they deny wrongdoing.
The opposition says the incident shows the "undue influence" the family wields over President Jacob Zuma.
The family's business interests in South Africa cover mining, aviation, technology and the media.
Bollywood stars and Indian government officials reportedly flew in for the four-day wedding of Vega Gupta to Aaskash Jahajgarhia in the casino resort of Sun City.
During a heated parliamentary debate, MP David Maynier of the opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) party said "heads must roll" over the fact that the chartered plane was allowed to land at the Waterkloof military base near the capital, Pretoria.
"We cannot sit back and allow ministers to get off the hook by hanging a few 'rogue officials' out to dry," he added.
Mr Zuma - who did not attend the debate - was the "root cause" of the problem, Mr Maynier said.
"He is responsible for creating the 'culture of undue influence' referred to in the investigation report," he added.
Releasing the report, Justice Minister Jeff Radebe rejected allegations of a cover-up.
Two officials were on a "frolic on their own" when they granted the family access to the base, and the cabinet was not involved, he said.
The report named the officials as Chief of State Protocol Bruce Koloane and a senior official at Waterkloof, Lt Col Christine Anderson.
The report also said that an individual at the Indian High Commission "re-designated the wedding entourage as an official delegation" so that the base could be used "under the cover of diplomatic privilege".
"The landing of the flight was a direct result of manipulation of processes and was undesirable," the report added.
The Indian High Commission has not yet commented on the findings.
Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said the opposition was blaming Mr Zuma because they were "consumed by hatred" for him.
"If the report does not find Zuma guilty, they are unable to accept it."
When the controversy first broke, Gupta family spokesman Haranath Ghosh said the Indian High Commission had arranged for the plane to land at the base because it was carrying "high profile ministers and dignitaries" who had been invited to the wedding.
The family's 121-car convoy was granted a full police escort to Sun City for the wedding, the inquiry found, AFP news agency reports.
A total of 194 government staff and 88 vehicles were used, 296 private security officers were hired, and two planes and seven helicopters used to ferry guests, it adds. | British freestyle skier James Woods won the first World Cup slopestyle title of the 2015-16 season.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
South Africa's main opposition party has condemned as a cover-up an official probe into the use of a military base for a society wedding. |
Please summarize the given passage. | 5 June 2016 Last updated at 17:22 BST
Leah Washington, 18, was joined by Joe Pugh, 19 - who was also involved in the crash - for the annual Barnsley Hospital Charity Rainbow Dash.
Ms Washington's left leg was amputated following the Smiler crash at the Staffordshire park last June.
Mr Pugh shattered both his kneecaps when the ride crashed into an empty carriage. | A teenager who lost a leg in the Alton Towers rollercoaster crash has taken part in a 5km run to raise money for charity. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | Dave Edwards' header put Wolves ahead inside the opening three minutes, only for City striker Tammy Abraham to fire in his 14th goal of the season.
Aden Flint then headed the visitors in front before half-time.
But Helder Costa's volley made it 2-2, and Cavaleiro scored from the spot after Flint's handball to win it.
There was more drama right at the very end of the match when Marlon Pack's header was cleared off the line, with City's players and supporters feeling it had snuck over.
But Wolves survived to record back-to-back victories for the first time since August, moving them above the Robins to 15th in the Championship table in the process.
City, whose manager Lee Johnson remonstrated with the referee on the pitch after full-time, slipped to 17th having lost 10 of their past 13 matches in all competitions.
Wolves boss Paul Lambert: "We were brilliant. The entertainment value is unbelievable. It really is.
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"The chances we created and how exciting we are going forward is fantastic. There is a great bit of flair in the side which I have always wanted in my teams.
"Going forward we are a threat. We are still a million miles from where I want to be but we look different to the team that started in August.
"I would rather go through that than a 1-0 boring game."
Bristol City head coach Lee Johnson:
"We have to be better, we are too easy to cut through at the moment.
"Our challenge is to turn these performances in our favour. There is not a lot wrong. A couple of players in key positions will help us.
"It is disappointing but we have to make sure that when we are 2-1 up we close up the game a lot better than we did."
Match ends, Wolverhampton Wanderers 3, Bristol City 2.
Second Half ends, Wolverhampton Wanderers 3, Bristol City 2.
Attempt blocked. Marlon Pack (Bristol City) header from very close range is blocked. Assisted by Callum O'Dowda with a headed pass.
Foul by Joe Mason (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Hördur Bjorgvin Magnusson (Bristol City) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Attempt saved. Tammy Abraham (Bristol City) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Josh Brownhill.
Ivan Cavaleiro (Wolverhampton Wanderers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Ivan Cavaleiro (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Mark Little (Bristol City) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Attempt missed. Tammy Abraham (Bristol City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Lee Tomlin following a set piece situation.
Attempt missed. Lee Tomlin (Bristol City) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right following a set piece situation.
Foul by Jack Price (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Aaron Wilbraham (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Jón Dadi Bödvarsson (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Marlon Pack (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Substitution, Bristol City. Aaron Wilbraham replaces Luke Freeman.
Joe Mason (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Marlon Pack (Bristol City).
Attempt missed. Lee Tomlin (Bristol City) right footed shot from more than 35 yards is too high. Assisted by Tammy Abraham.
Goal! Wolverhampton Wanderers 3, Bristol City 2. Ivan Cavaleiro (Wolverhampton Wanderers) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the top right corner.
Penalty conceded by Aden Flint (Bristol City) with a hand ball in the penalty area.
Foul by Jack Price (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Luke Freeman (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt saved. Luke Freeman (Bristol City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Joe Bryan.
Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Frank Fielding.
Attempt saved. David Edwards (Wolverhampton Wanderers) header from the right side of the six yard box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Hélder Costa with a cross.
Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Aden Flint.
Attempt blocked. Joe Mason (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Jón Dadi Bödvarsson.
Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Jón Dadi Bödvarsson replaces Nouha Dicko.
Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Joe Mason replaces Bright Enobakhare.
Offside, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Matt Doherty tries a through ball, but Nouha Dicko is caught offside.
Hand ball by Richard Stearman (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Attempt missed. Tammy Abraham (Bristol City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Lee Tomlin.
Foul by Nouha Dicko (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Joe Bryan (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt missed. Tammy Abraham (Bristol City) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Luke Freeman with a cross.
Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Joe Bryan.
Attempt saved. Matt Doherty (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the left is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ivan Cavaleiro.
Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Aden Flint.
Foul by Nouha Dicko (Wolverhampton Wanderers). | Ivan Cavaleiro's late penalty gave Wolves victory over Bristol City, condemning the Robins to a fourth successive defeat. |
Can you summarize this passage? | Parliamentary advisers said networks such as Tor could be used for criminal ends but also in the public interest.
The advice for MPs contradicted the Prime Minister David Cameron, who has said law enforcement should be handed the keys to encrypted communications.
One expert said the document showed Mr Cameron's plans to be "noble", but ultimately unworkable.
The Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (Post), which issues advice to MPs, said that there was "widespread agreement that banning online anonymity systems altogether is not seen as an acceptable policy option in the UK".
In a briefing document on the dark net, of which Tor forms a prominent part, it added that, "even if it were, there would be technical challenges".
The report, published on Monday 9 March, cited the example of the Chinese government, which attempted to block access to Tor in order to enforce bans on unauthorised websites.
In reaction, it said, the body that maintains the network, simply added "bridges" that were "very difficult to block", allowing people to continue accessing Tor.
Speaking in January, following attacks by gunmen in Paris and its surrounding areas, David Cameron said there should be no "means of communication" the security services could not read.
He said: "In extremis, it has been possible to read someone's letter, to listen to someone's call to mobile communications.
"The question remains, 'Are we going to allow a means of communications where it simply is not possible to do that?' My answer to that question is, 'No, we must not.'"
He has also enlisted companies that operate internet search engines, such as Google, Microsoft and Yahoo, to help track down and block images of child abuse.
However, the Post report clarified that the dark web was not indexed by such search engines, limiting the extent to which they would be able to help.
Jamie Bartlett, of the think tank Demos, whose book The Dark Net was cited in the report, said that - in theory - he agreed with Mr Cameron that there should not be a place in the dark web for criminals to hide.
However, he said that - in practice - the prime minister's plans were shown by the parliamentary document to be "more or less impossible to actually do".
He said: "It is about police being able to force people to give up their anonymity when necessary, without taking away the ability to be anonymous online."
The Post provides reports for MPs to offer them independent, non-political advice on highly specialised and complicated issues in science and technology.
It does not bind them to any position, but helps inform parliamentary debates and votes on subjects of which many MPs would otherwise have little understanding.
In its report, it differentiated between use of the dark web for criminal purposes and for acts in the public interest - such as whistle-blowing.
It noted that some people have argued for a network that allowed users to be anonymous, but without Tor hidden services (THS), such as the Silk Road marketplace, which have been used for criminal purposes.
"However, THS also benefit non-criminal Tor users because they may add a further layer of user security," the report said.
"Sites requiring strong security, like whistle-blowing platforms are offered as THS.
"Also, computer experts argue that any legislative attempt to preclude THS from being available in the UK over Tor would be technologically infeasible."
A spokesman for the prime minister did not respond to a request for comment. | A ban on online anonymity networks would be "technologically infeasible" and unwise, MPs have been told. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | But for 25 times as many patients, it's not their health they want to discuss.
It's their finances.
Macmillan's research shows that most cancer sufferers are nearly £7,000 a year worse off because of the disease.
Many go overdrawn, or into debt. Some have even become homeless.
Banks meanwhile are being accused of doing very little to help such patients in their hour of need.
But now Lloyds Banking Group has decided to act. This week it begin offering some practical financial help.
Tracy Jameson was forced to give up her job as an assistant head teacher in Oxford, after she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer last year.
After six months of sick leave, she went on to half pay.
As a single mother, her finances were stretched to the limit, and she used up all her £2,500 overdraft.
"I was having to take unexpected transport; suddenly none of my clothes fitted. Everything was literally falling off me because I had lost so much weight," she told the BBC.
On occasions, money matters took a back seat.
"I found that I used all of my braveness to face the cancer treatment. If I needed to buy cat food, I needed to buy cat food. If I needed to buy cordial, because that's what I felt like, then I bought it."
Lloyds already has what it calls its "Moments of Truth" team, which helps customers suffering from a bereavement or other personal issues.
Members of the team have now been trained by Macmillan Cancer Support to deal with cancer patients as well.
By the end of the year there will be 100 such staff, based in call centres in Newport, Leeds and Dunfermline.
They have the power to refund charges and fees on current accounts, give budgetary help to customers, and organise repayment holidays on loans and mortgages.
Those banking with Halifax or Bank of Scotland are also eligible.
"We can give them a two-month holiday break on loan payments; mortgage payments similarly," says Lee Jones, who runs the bank's team in South Wales.
"We can look at what works for the customer."
In Tracy's case they offered her a mortgage holiday, and refunded all banking charges for six months. They also used her in a television advertisement to promote the service.
Tracy's view of banks has changed as a result: "Banks are your financial partners; they are not your adversary."
The move by Lloyds follows an example set by the much smaller Nationwide Building Society two years ago.
Since then it has dealt with nearly 2,000 cancer patients or their carers.
Many face extra expenses because of travelling to hospital, or having to give up work.
Like Lloyds, it can refund charges, and offer payment holidays.
"With cancer we are often looking at short-term measures, to try and get people through a particular period of treatment," says Mandy Griffin, director of membership at Nationwide.
"It could be they're having chemotherapy; it could be they are unable to work for a period; so a payment holiday is ideal in those circumstances."
While Macmillan has welcomed the move by Lloyds and Nationwide, it believes there has not been enough progress in the banking industry as a whole.
It is asking the regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), to impose a "duty of care" on the banks, to force them to do more.
"I'd like to see the whole banking sector take a look at the work we're doing with Lloyds and Nationwide, and actually see the difference that it is making, day in and day out, to vulnerable customers," says Dr Fran Woodard, an executive director at Macmillan.
So will other banks follow suit?
UK Finance, which represents the High Street banks, said its members were keen to respond to individuals' circumstances and needs "sympathetically and positively".
However, no other bank has announced plans for anything similar.
But given that Lloyds has some 25 million customers, it is a challenge that rivals may not want to ignore.
After all, one in two people born since 1960 is likely to get cancer at some time in their lives.
A year on from her diagnosis, Tracy is doing OK, but will not be able to return to teaching.
"While you weren't looking, cancer has bulldozed the rest of your life," she says.
This story has been updated, in the light of further information | Some cancer sufferers who phone the Macmillan support line want to talk about death, and the process of dying. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | There were 700 A-level language entries in 2015 compared with 1,152 in 2009.
A scheme, which sees university students mentoring secondary school pupils, is being extended after making a "clear impact" on class numbers.
Professor Claire Gorrara said the scheme was more important than ever after the Brexit vote.
The Cardiff University professor, who leads the project, said it had led to improvements to the 28 schools involved in the pilot across Wales.
Under the project, Aberystwyth, Bangor, Cardiff and Swansea undergraduates are trained to coach school pupils on their language skills.
Over half of the schools reported increased numbers for GCSE classes, and one school has decided to start teaching a modern foreign language for the first time in three years.
Funded by the Welsh Government the scheme will now be rolled out to 44 secondary schools across Wales.
Prof Gorrara said: "In the wake of the vote in the UK to leave the European Union, the importance of promoting modern languages is particularly urgent.
"Now more than ever, young people need to develop linguistic and intercultural skills that will help them develop professionally and personally, and compete on a global stage."
Last year a major study by the British Council and CfBT Education Trust found modern foreign language learning in secondary schools in Wales was "declining rapidly".
In 2005, 12,826 children studied a language at GCSE, but by 2014 the number had fallen by a third to 8,601.
Budget cuts, overloaded school timetables and Welsh government assessment systems were blamed.
Stephanie Conning was giving evidence about the deaths of her 25-year-old brother Rick Jones, and Tracey Cox, 23.
The inquests jury heard the three got into the ground on 15 April 1989 when an exit gate opened on police orders.
Mrs Conning said she believed fans have been blamed for causing the terrace crush in which 96 were fatally injured.
She said: "Something that I have found very difficult over the [last] 26 years, that's been almost as bad as the bereavement, is about the people that went through Gate C... we have often been blamed for causing the deaths."
The disaster happened in Sheffield at the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.
Mrs Conning, who was 18 at the time, said they had "no choice" but to do so as they were "getting crushed" outside the turnstiles at the Leppings Lane end of the stadium.
The gate led to a concourse, from where many fans headed down a tunnel leading to terrace enclosures.
More than 2,000 Liverpool fans went through the gate in about five minutes, the inquests have been told.
Ch Supt David Duckenfield, the police match commander, has admitted at the inquests that his failure to order officers to close the tunnel "was the direct cause" of the 96 deaths.
Mrs Conning, Mr Jones and Ms Cox went through the exit gate at 14:53 BST, the jury heard.
By 14:56 they were seen on footage among the crowd in pen three.
The jury heard that "very quickly" after entering the enclosure they were "shoved" by a surge.
Mrs Conning said it "threw" her forward and down the terraces and she stumbled but managed to stay on her feet. Ms Cox fell over and lost her shoe.
Liverpool fans around Ms Cox helped her back up and returned her shoe, but Mrs Conning said that "within seconds" another surge pushed her further forward.
She told the jury that after the second surge she was facing the back of the pen and looked for her brother unsuccessfully.
She said: "I wanted my big brother to help me. I was scared."
Mrs Conning never saw her brother or Ms Cox alive again. She escaped from the terraces through a gate in the fencing at the front of the terrace, but does not know how she got there.
Mrs Conning thanked Liverpool fans for their help that day.
The inquests, sitting in Warrington, Cheshire, are due to resume on Thursday.
BBC News: Profiles of all those who died | Addressing a serious decline in the number of Welsh pupils learning foreign languages is "urgent" following the Brexit vote, an academic has warned.
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A Hillsborough survivor whose brother died with his girlfriend said being blamed for their deaths was "almost as bad" as the bereavement. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | They have won nine European bronze medals but have never played in a world, Paralympic or European final.
Co-captain Sophie Carrigill said: "It's definitely about time we changed that."
The GB men will defend a title they have won three times in a row and begin against Sweden on 22 June, with the women playing Germany on the same day.
The British women started a centralised training programme after the London 2012 Paralympics.
They have since gone on to record their best ever World Championships finish of fifth, followed by their best Paralympics placing of fourth at Rio last summer.
We've been at the top of the sport for the past 15 or 20 years so there's always some pressure on us to win a medal
In the Canary Islands, they will attempt to break the dominance of Germany and Netherlands, who are perennial European finalists.
"We're ready to compete in that final and compete for that gold medal," said Carrigill.
"We proved to the world that we're a really strong team and missing out on that medal in Rio just makes you more hungry for the next one," said Carrigill.
"For the last few years we've been centralised at the University of Worcester and being able to train with your team every day is going to help you perform better and build relationships.
"We're excited for the Europeans. We've had a run of bronzes but we've been training really hard and making that final is what the GB programme deserves."
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The British men's team go to Spain having won Paralympic bronze at Rio 2016, as well as the past three European titles.
"We're going to go there to win it, of course, but there's another five or six teams who will be thinking the same," said five-time Paralympian Terry Bywater.
"We've been at the top of the sport for the past 15 or 20 years, so there's always some pressure on us to win a medal.
"We're all passionate about what we do so it's just about keeping that level of consistency about us."
PC Luke Smith, 33, who is based at Hastings, was arrested in March after claims made against him by a member of the public.
He is charged with misconduct in public office and obtaining personal data.
He was remanded on unconditional bail by Brighton magistrates to appear at Lewes Crown Court on 10 December.
Mr Smith is accused of obtaining and disclosing personal information without the permission of the data controller.
The offences are alleged to have taken place between January 2011 and March 2015.
Sussex Police said he had been suspended from duty pending the outcome of the case.
The 26-year-old batsman will assist new County Championship skipper Billy Godleman and Wes Durston in both one-day formats.
Rutherford has played 16 Test matches - the last of which came in January 2015.
"Hamish is an experienced international who already has a great relationship with the lads," coach Graeme Welch told the club website. | Great Britain women's wheelchair basketball team feel they are ready to make their first major final at the European Championships in Tenerife.
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A Sussex Police officer has appeared in court accused of threatening a prostitute and performing sexual acts while in uniform.
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Derbyshire have appointed New Zealand international Hamish Rutherford as their vice-captain for all formats. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | The world number three started the second round on level par and had five birdies and an eagle in his opening seven holes after starting on the 10th.
The Northern Irishman's effort equalled the tournament record at Sawgrass set in round one by Ireland's Shane Lowry.
McIlroy is two shots behind clubhouse leaders Jonas Blixt and Alex Cejka.
The 27-year-old was one of the early starters and began his round nine shots adrift of overnight leader Jason Day, but took advantage of one of his favourites stretches of holes, sinking a 25-foot putt for birdie on the 10th.
He got up and down from a greenside bunker on the par-five 11th, before making it four birdies in a row on the 12th and 13th.
After a first par of the day on the 14th, the four-time major winner holed from six feet on the 15th for birdie.
From 50 feet across the green he eagled the 16th, only to leave another long-range putt just inches short on the famous par-three 17th island hole.
He managed two further birdies on the front nine but hit a bogey six on his last hole, the ninth, his only dropped shot of the day.
McIlroy's brilliant run of scoring means he has now played the back nine in 44 under par since 2013, compared to 12 over par for the front nine.
Portrush golfer Graeme McDowell is two under after a two-under par round of 70.
Meanwhile, American Will Wilcox made the first hole-in-one on the 17th at Sawgrass since 2002.
On average, they have received increases of 7.2% over the past year, according to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics).
That figure exactly matches the rise in house price in 2016, as measured by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
However the industry body said the number was "an exaggeration".
In the previous year estate agents, surveyors and valuers received average rises of 6.5%, according to the Rics survey.
Earlier this week, ONS figures showed that average UK wages grew by 2.6% in the year to December.
However the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) said not all residential agents would have received such a generous rise.
"40% of what they earn is commission, so that's success-related," said Mark Hayward, NAEA managing director.
"Their basic salary, I'm pretty sure, will have remained the same."
Most agents charge sellers a percentage of the sale price, so fees tend to rise in line with house prices.
However the NAEA said fees had typically dropped over the last year, from 1.2% of the sale price, to 1.1%.
The survey, conducted by Rics and the recruitment firm Macdonald and Company, showed that the average salary of a property professional is £52,362.
In London the average salary is £61,141.
The survey of over 8,000 Rics members also revealed a large gender pay gap among those who work in the industry.
On average, male agents earn more than £11,000 a year more than females, a fact that Rics described as "disheartening".
The NAEA said there was a 50-50 gender split in residential sales and lettings, and that pay was the same. | Rory McIlroy hit an eight-under-par 64 which included a record-equalling 29 on the back nine to surge into contention at the Players Championship.
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Britain's estate agents, so often maligned by the house-buying public, are enjoying another year of bumper pay rises, research suggests. |
Summarize the information given below. | The shy and secretive animals were wiped out in Scotland more than 1,000 years ago.
They survived in continental Europe - Scandinavia, the eastern Baltic, Carpathian mountains and the Balkans. In some of these areas, their numbers have recovered from populations decimated by hunting and habitat loss by the mid 20th Century.
Five other things on the cats:
1. The Eurasian lynx, scientific name Lynx lynx, is the third largest predator in Europe after the brown bear and the wolf.
2. The last of Britain's big cats died out around the year 500, according to the Lynx UK Trust, but populations may have survived longer in Scotland.
3. The Eurasian lynx has distinctive black tufts at the tips of its ears.
4. They are an extremely efficient hunter, according to BBC Nature. They use stealth and pounce techniques to bring down animals four times their size, delivering a fatal bite to the neck or snout of an ambushed deer.
5. Lynx' preference to go for the throat of prey has led to a myth that the cats suck blood. This misconception was recorded by scientists in a research paper on Balkan lynx and published in the International Journal of Conservation in 2011.
The authority previously rejected a bid by the Trail Riders Fellowship (TRF) to add rights for bikes and 4x4s to its records of five countryside tracks.
The court ruled the authority was wrong to reject the applications.
The council would not reveal the extent of its legal costs but said it would pay TRF's bill of £10,000.
It will now discuss and consult on the TRF applications.
They date back more than 10 years, before a change in the law extinguished unrecorded rights of way for "mechanically propelled vehicles".
In 2004, Friends of Dorset's Rights of Way applied to have five routes recorded as "byways open to all traffic"
They were: Bailey Drove in Batcombe, bridleways at Cheselbourne and Dewlish, a route in Tarrant Gunville and two separate tracks in Beaminster.
TRF, which campaigns to preserve green lanes or byways, where all vehicles are permitted, took up the application but Dorset County Council refused it in 2010 because the council said the maps TRF used were not of the required scale.
Council leader Robert Gould said: "This ruling gives us a reasoned, balanced outcome that we can apply consistently in the future.
"Modifications to the definitive map often raise opposing viewpoints. Our job is to consider the evidence presented and apply the law before deciding whether the map and statement should be changed."
The case has already been through the High Court and Court of Appeal.
When asked what the council had spent on the appeal, a spokeswoman said: "It is in the public interest that the council continues to ensure it is receiving the best possible value for money when determining its contracts with external providers... Release of this information may jeopardise that situation."
Church, 27, has scored three goals in 23 appearances for the English Championship side this season.
However, starts have been hard to come by for the former Charlton forward.
Goodwillie, 26, has featured in 25 matches for Aberdeen during this campaign, scoring twice, and his switch is also on a loan basis.
However, the striker will be ineligible for County's League Cup final meeting with Hibernian as he has already featured in the competition for the Dons.
Capped three times by Scotland, Goodwillie had started the last two matches for the Dons.
After five years at Dundee United, he moved to Blackburn in 2011 for a fee in excess of £2m.
He failed to establish himself at Ewood Park and signed for Aberdeen in 2014 after loan spells at Crystal Palace, Dundee United and Blackpool.
Church has 33 caps for Wales and was used four times as a late substitute last year in their successful Euro 2016 campaign. | Conservation charity Trees for Life and writer George Monbiot are promoting the reinstatement of once-native Eurasian lynx to Scotland as part of efforts to "rewild" large areas of the country.
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Dorset County Council must reconsider an application for rights of way for off-road vehicles, following a judgement by the Supreme Court.
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Ross County have signed striker David Goodwillie from Aberdeen after Wales international Simon Church moved to Pittodrie from MK Dons. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | Reports say an attack helicopter opened fire on the column of Seleka rebels as it approached the city.
Rebels earlier forced their way through a checkpoint 75km (45 miles) north.
The checkpoint, in Damara, was manned by a regional force which had designated it as a red line the rebels should not cross.
But the atmosphere in Bangui is very tense and all businesses, offices and schools have shut, a journalist in the capital told the BBC.
Seleka began their offensive this week, accusing President Francois Bozize of failing to honour a peace deal signed in January - a charge he denies.
The rebels joined a power-sharing government in January, in talks brokered by regional leaders, to end the rebellion they launched last year.
Journalist Junior Lingange in Bangui told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme that the rebels said 2,000 of their fighters had taken the checkpoint in Damara, where some 500 troops from the regional Fomac force were based.
Damara is about an hour's drive from the capital, he says. In Bangui, government troops were driving around the capital, where some 400 South Africa troops are also based, said the journalist.
"The rebel column, which was headed south, was stopped by an aircraft... an attack helicopter," a senior regional military source told Reuters news agency.
"The helicopter opened fire on the column, forcing it to disperse ... The rebels have not reached Bangui."
CAR has been hit by a series of rebellions since independence from France in 1960.
It is one of the poorest countries in Africa, despite its considerable mineral resources. | Government forces in the Central African Republic (CAR) say they have halted an advance by insurgents towards the capital, Bangui. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | He was best known for his role as Phil Banks in US television series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air with Will Smith.
His fellow cast member in the show Alfonso Ribeiro, who played his son Carlton, tweeted: "I'm deeply saddened to say that James Avery has passed away.
"He was a second father to me. I will miss him greatly."
Jada Pinkett Smith, Will Smith's actress wife, also paid tribute to the actor, saying they had "lost yet another friend".
"Our condolences to aunt Florence (his mother), Miss Barbara (his wife) and all those who loved him," she wrote on her Facebook page. "Rest in peace James."
Avery appeared in a number of films and TV shows including Grey's Anatomy and Star Trek: Enterprise.
He hosted TV programme Going Places, and provided voice-overs in animated TV series Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Iron Man.
But he was best known for his portrayal of the judge and patriarch 'Uncle Phil' in 1990s sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.
He appeared in 141 episodes of the programme alongside his on-screen nephew, Will Smith, and was reunited with most of the cast at a charity event two years ago.
Avery's publicist, Cynthia Snyder, told the Associated Press that Avery died on Tuesday in Glendale, California, following complications from open heart surgery.
Avery served in Vietnam in the US Navy from 1968 to 1969, before he began writing TV scripts and poetry for the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
He is survived by his wife of 26 years, Barbara, his mother, Florence Avery, and his stepson, Kevin Waters.
Avery had been working until September this year on the Zach Braff film Wish I Was Here, which will premiere at the Sundance Film Festival later this month.
Ms Snyder said plans were being made for a memorial service. | The American actor James Avery has died aged 68, his publicist has said. |
Summarize the passage below. | A federal judge approved charges of illicit association and fraudulent administration against Ms Fernandez.
Judge Julian Ercolini also ordered the freezing of $633m (£516m) of Ms Fernandez's assets. She has previously denied any wrongdoing.
It is alleged that her government steered public contracts to a businessman close to her family.
Ms Fernandez has said the case is politically motivated and accused current President Mauricio Macri of plotting against her.
"Illicit association is a legal concept that has been used by all dictatorships to persecute their political opponents," she tweeted.
In a court appearance in October, Ms Fernandez presented national budget documents as part of her evidence, highlighting that the accounts had been approved by parliamentary bodies and the country's auditor general.
Judge Ercolini also approved corruption charges against two of Ms Fernandez's former aides, ex-planning minister Julio de Vido and former public works Secretary Jose Lopez, as well as businessman Lazaro Baez.
Ms Fernandez is accused of favouring Mr Baez's construction company, Austral, in the concession of contracts for public projects.
The company was granted more than 50 contracts for public projects during her two terms in office, Clarin newspaper reported.
In June, Mr Lopez was caught throwing bags filled with almost $9m (£7.3m) over the walls of a monastery, and was arrested on suspicion of money laundering.
Ms Fernandez served two terms from 2007 to December 2015. She succeeded her husband, the late Nestor Kirchner, who was in power from 2003 to 2007.
She is one of the main leaders of the opposition to the centre-right government of Mr Macri. | Former Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has been charged over corruption allegations. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | The visiting team trooped in with their pride hurting not just because of what their driven opponents from Malmo had just done to them but by what their own manager had said about them.
When Ronny Deila accused his team of being "scared" and "frightened" on the night, it was as firm a kick to their collective solar plexus as anything the Swedes visited upon them.
By levelling an accusation of timidity at his players, Deila was calling into question all sorts of things - principally their character.
It was a searing comment, the most serious accusation he could have made. And he was correct.
Celtic failed dismally to front-up. Their go-to players were routed. Virgil van Dijk, Charlie Mulgrew, Scott Brown and Stefan Johansen were all badly beaten in their head-to-heads. Celtic's leaders were cowed.
True, they were the victims of a miscarriage of justice when Nir Bitton's goal was disallowed just before the break, but later on, nobody from the Celtic camp sought refuge in a hard luck story.
Fair play to them for that. Refusing to cling to that life raft was the best part of their night. Goal or no goal, they knew they weren't good enough. Not even close.
Brown, the captain, called it best when he said he was ashamed of the performance. Brown's honesty was commendable in a way that his football was not.
The poverty of Celtic's play was shocking. No sensible person would ever make grand claims about Deila's team, but even if by modest standards this was dreadful.
Their passing was abject to the point of embarrassing. Too often they had a death-wish when in possession. Misplaced pass followed misplaced pass and all the while Malmo's confidence grew as the noise level of their supporters spurred them on.
From early in the evening, Celtic had the appearance of men who were caving in under the pressure. In the end, they went down, not like the lions Deila believed them to be or the pigs they were allegedly accused of being, but mice.
Two goals conceded from corner kicks told its own story. They had their warning that corners could hurt them when Jo Inge Berget smashed in the goal that made it 3-2 in Glasgow, but this is a Celtic team that won't - or can't - learn its lesson.
The verve of their first 20 minutes at Celtic Park was like a snapshot from another era. It was as if the characters who had tormented Malmo in that opening spell in Glasgow had been replaced by a gang of imposters.
Deila slammed his players but he hardly exonerated himself. How could he when he hopelessly misjudged the merits of his team, talking them up like they had made vast progress in the past year.
If they have made any, it's limited and painfully short of disposing of a team like Malmo, a moderate side put together for small money, but one in possession of the kind of mettle that Celtic do not possess.
There was a moment in the lead-up to Malmo's second goal that was, in some ways, illustrative of the difference between the teams. It involved the local talisman, Markus Rosenberg, and Brown, the guy who is supposed to be Celtic's galvanising presence.
A lobbed ball was played into the Celtic half and Rosenberg and Brown competed for it. We say competed but, in truth, it wasn't a contest. Rosenberg got there first, back-headed it and then, as Brown was gathering his thoughts, Rosenberg left him for dead and set off in a beeline for the Celtic penalty box.
The ball went to Berget, who forced a fine save from Craig Gordon. When the ball broke loose, it was Rosenberg who was on to it. As he was forcing a second wonderful save from the Celtic goalkeeper, Brown still hadn't recovered his ground.
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Rosenberg's thinking was quicker and his hunger greater. He was just sharper. They all were.
Malmo won a corner in that moment and promptly scored from it, Dedryck Boyata deflecting a shot into his own net. We remember the hapless endgame from the Celtic defender, but the desire that preceded it from the Malmo striker was indicative of the home team's attitude.
The infuriating thing for Celtic is that they had the winning of this tie and let it slip. At 2-0 and again at 3-1 they had Malmo where they wanted them in the first leg but they couldn't finish them off. What is it they say about giving a sucker an even break?
This was an avoidable failure. Every time Celtic miss out on the Champions League group stage they make it harder on themselves to return. You really have to wonder when Celtic will be back on the big stage.
It is said that their natural habitat now is the Europa League but you wouldn't be too confident in Celtic holding their own in that competition either.
When Van Dijk departs, Celtic's central defensive options will be Efe Ambrose. Boyata - who has something of the Ambrose about him - and young Eoghan O'Connell.
At a push, you could play Mulgrew and Mikael Lustig in there, but that's only creating problems elsewhere.
Up front, Leigh Griffiths is their only realistic option. Nadir Ciftci looks leaden-footed and out of his depth at that level. Stefan Scepovic, a Deila signing, was a waste of £2.2m and Anthony Stokes is miles out of the European picture these days.
The squad has pockets of talent, but it's thin on the ground in a European context and too much of it is given to bouts of flakiness, the kind of thing that Brown said he was ashamed of.
For 20 minutes in the first leg, it was easy to see what Deila was talking about when he spoke of the huge progress made in the last year. For so much that followed those 20 minutes it was hard to see any improvement.
Malmo have done brilliantly to make it through. Their budget is a fraction of Celtic's and their team is a brand new one, still gelling. They're not a formidable side but they have a formidable spirit.
They showed mental strength where Celtic showed weakness. They looked like players who loved the occasion. Celtic, in comparison, were spooked by it.
Malmo got what they deserved on Tuesday - and so did Celtic. They had their chance - and they blew it. | In the minutes after Celtic's lame exit from the Champions League, the mixed zone at the Swedbank Stadium was like a hospital ward for damaged footballers. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Sir James Munby said the system was "ill-prepared" and facing a "crisis".
Official figures show care cases have more than doubled in the last decade to an estimated 14,713 in 2016.
Sir James said it was "generally agreed" that the Baby P case in 2007 was behind an initial rise.
Peter Connelly, referred to at one stage in court as Baby P, was 17 months old when he died at home in Haringey, after suffering months of abuse.
The toddler had suffered more than 50 injuries, and had been visited 60 times by the authorities in the eight months before his death.
The serious case review put Peter's "horrifying death" down to the incompetence of most of the staff members of official agencies who came into contact with him.
In comments made public on Tuesday, Sir James made what BBC correspondent Clive Coleman called a "blistering assessment" of the care system.
Calling for urgent research, he said: "We are facing a crisis and, truth be told, we have no very clear strategy for meeting the crisis".
Charting the rise in cases, he said there was a "dramatic increase" of some 35% in cases in 2009-10.
He noted: "It is generally agreed that this unprecedented increase was the consequence of the Baby Peter case".
Yet the number of care cases continued to "increase significantly" even after the initial reaction to Baby P.
Sir James said that research into the reasons for the increase was needed "as a matter of urgency".
Care cases, with their potential for life-long separation of children and their parents, are of unique gravity and importance, he said.
Fairness and justice demand a process in which both the parents and the child could fully participate with the assistance of representation by skilled and experienced lawyers, he added.
Sir James stressed: "I do not believe that child abuse/neglect is rising by 14%, let alone 20% a year.
"So this cannot be the sole explanation. It follows that local authority behaviour must be playing a significant role."
Ms Johansson claims La premiere chose qu'on regarde (The First Thing We Look At) makes "fraudulent use of her name, fame and image" for commercial gain.
In addition to damages, she has sought an injunction to stop the book from being translated or adapted for cinema.
Mr Delacourt and his publisher have dismissed the allegations as "crazy".
Their lawyer called the legal action "totally scandalous".
"This is a literary, not commercial, approach," said Anne Veil. "She has not been used as a product. Gregory Delacourt is not a paparazzo, he's a writer."
The US star sued Mr Delacourt and his publisher JC Lattes last June, after the author described the heroine of his novel as Ms Johansson's "doppelganger".
The actress has demanded 50,000 euros (£41,000) in damages, with her lawyer, Vincent Toledano, arguing that the bestselling book also contained "defamatory claims about her private life".
It features amorous relationships that "never existed", he said, adding: "It does what the tabloids do, it says anything."
Judges at the tribunal in Paris are expected to issue their ruling in early July.
The work, which was published in March 2013, is centred on model Jeanine Foucamprez who bears a striking resemblance to Ms Johansson.
The first part of the novel is told through the eyes of a garage mechanic convinced that the famous film star has turned up on his doorstep.
But that illusion is quickly shattered and "for the rest of the novel no-one can be any doubt that it is about Jeanine Foucamprez", according to Emmanuelle Allibert, a spokeswoman for JC Lattes.
"We have never known anything like it," she said.
"It is all the more surprising for the fact that the novel is not even about Scarlett Johansson. It is about a woman who is Scarlet Johansson's double. This writ seems crazy to us."
Mr Delacourt is considered one of France's most successful modern writers. | The number of cases in which children can be separated from their parents on the application of a council has seen a "relentless rise", says the head of the family courts in England and Wales.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A court case has opened in France against author Gregoire Delacourt over claims that one of his characters defames US actress Scarlett Johansson. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Well, they've all been chosen as 50 of the films children should watch before they turn 11.
Film industry experts picked the movies which most benefit a child's development and creativity.
The list, put together by education charity Into Film, also allows for the nostalgia factor when choosing which films families want to watch together.
The Must See Movies Before You Grow Up campaign - run in conjunction with the UK video industry - is split into five categories: Classics, thrills and chills, heroes and villains, kids rule and adventure.
Old favourites like Mary Poppins and Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory are included alongside popular recent films like The Lego Movie and Kubo and the Two Strings.
Roald Dahl is well represented on the list, with films of his books The Witches, The BFG and Fantastic Mr Fox also among those picked.
The oldest film chosen is Disney's 1941 animation Dumbo, with a handful selected from last year including Trolls and The Secret Life of Pets.
Others selected include Night at the Museum, Shrek, Free Willy, Star Wars: A New Hope and Babe.
Into Film's chief executive Paul Reeve said he hoped that watching the films would help foster "a love of movies that can last a lifetime".
He added: "Film entertains, educates and inspires. The Must See Movies list of the 50 films every child should see before they reach the age of 11 has been selected by our panel to do all of those things."
All 50 films - the full list of which can be seen on the Into Film website - are being distributed by retailers this summer.
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected].
Mr Ban said a number of countries had threatened to cut off vital funding for many UN programmes.
He said the decision to remove them from the UN list of violators of children's rights was "one of the most painful" he'd had to make.
Saudi Arabia denies the threats.
The UN announced on Monday that it had temporarily removed the Saudi-led coalition from the child's rights blacklist which was published last week.
In his first public remarks following the announcement, Mr Ban said he decided to do so after Saudi Arabia along with some other Arab and Muslim countries threatened to cut off funding to UN humanitarian programs.
He said he "had to consider the very real prospect that millions of other children would suffer grievously if, as was suggested to me, countries would de-fund many UN programmes."
"It is unacceptable for member-states to exert undue pressure," Mr Ban told reporters at UN headquarters.
Human rights groups had sharply criticised the decision to take Saudis off the list, saying the UN chief's office had "hit a new low".
The Saudi Ambassador to the UN, Abdullah Mouallimi, denied that his government had exerted pressure on the UN.
"We did not use threats or intimidation and we did not talk about funding," said Mr Mouallimi.
On Monday, Saudi Arabia vigorously protested against the released UN report which said the coalition was responsible for 60% of child deaths and injuries in Yemen last year.
Saudi officials said the casualty figures were "wildly exaggerated".
Later that day, Mr Ban accepted a Saudi proposal to remove the coalition from the blacklist pending a joint review of the cases and numbers cited in his report.
A year that has set Yemen back decades
No end in sight to war in Yemen
Practising medicine under fire in Yemen
A young girl and a city struggling for life
The coalition - which comprises Saudi Arabia and nine other Arab and Muslim nations, supported by the US and UK - began fighting the Houthis in March 2015, two months after the rebels drove Yemen's government from power and took full control of the capital, Sanaa.
Last Thursday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued his annual report on children and armed conflict, which described the situation in Yemen as "particularly worrisome".
It said there was a five-fold increase in the number of children recruited and used by armed groups in 2015 and that six times more children were killed and maimed compared with 2014.
The report attributed 510 child deaths and 667 injuries last year to the Saudi-led coalition, most of them caused by air strikes, and 142 child deaths and 247 injuries to the Houthis. | What have these films got in common - The Lion King, Annie, Toy Story, E.T., Paddington and Frozen?
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says he faced "unacceptable" pressure to remove the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen from a blacklist over child casualties. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Though only just announced, the exchange happened ahead of a historic meeting between the two sides' presidents on 7 November.
Beijing freed Chu Kung-hsun and Hsu Chang-kuo, who were held in China for nine years, while Taiwan released Li Zhihao, who was jailed 16 years ago.
Taiwanese media say it is the first time the two sides have swapped spies.
Taiwanese presidential spokesman Charles Chen said in a statement that the release was "based on a mutual goodwill gesture delivered by the Ma-Xi meeting".
"President Ma (Ying-jeou) hopes cross-strait mutual exchanges can continue and make more concrete achievements in the future," he added.
China's Taiwan Affairs Office confirmed the release of Col Chu Kung-hsun and Col Hsu Chang-kuo, saying they were freed "in accordance with the law".
Meanwhile, Taiwan said it gave advance parole to Li Zhihao, who had served part of his term.
Defence officials say the two colonels were the last Taiwanese military officials held in China for spying, but that some Taiwanese civilians convicted of spying remained imprisoned in China, the BBC's Cindy Sui reports from Taipei.
President Ma has been broadly friendly towards mainland China during his time in office, boosting tourism and trade ties.
Earlier this month, he and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in Singapore - the first time the leaders of China and Taiwan had held talks in more than 60 years.
China views Taiwan as a breakaway province which will one day be reunited with the mainland.
But many Taiwanese see it as independent and are concerned at China's growing influence. | Taiwan and China swapped jailed spies earlier this month, in a mutual gesture of goodwill. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | The agreement is the result of "internal political discussions", but uncertainty remains regarding which devolution deal the borough may join.
Councillors are split over whether to join the Liverpool City Region or a new Cheshire devolution deal.
Council leader Terry O'Neill said he would "continue conversations" with neighbouring authorities.
Labour-controlled Warrington Borough Council submitted a joint devolution bid to the government with Cheshire East Council and Cheshire West & Chester Council in August 2015.
However, in June 2016 councillors on the ruling Labour group in Warrington voted to reject the deal, which would have seen an elected mayor for the county.
The BBC understands some wanted the council to consider joining the Liverpool City Region instead.
A cross-party group of councillors tasked with deciding a way forward is due to present recommendations in December.
One Labour member of the taskforce, Morgan Tarr, claimed "the majority" of the group believed that the "best option available" to was to continue negotiations with the Liverpool City Region.
Helen Jones, Labour MP for Warrington North, previously argued the Cheshire devolution plans were a Conservative "stitch-up", because a mayor in the county was "very likely" to be a Conservative.
Mr O'Neill said: "We are now in agreement that the model of devolved powers from Whitehall, together with an elected mayor, is the most appropriate arrangement for our borough.
"We will continue our conversations with other local authorities and government to ensure we have the best set of benefits to support the long term future of the borough and the best outcomes for our residents and businesses."
The Seagulls were eight points clear of third place in early January but, after winning just three of their last seven, that gap has been cut to four points.
"By our standards of the season, it is a difficult period," Hughton said.
"You have got to go through these periods and it is about how you come through them."
Brighton have been in the top two since October, and were top of the table after beating Fulham on 2 January.
However, defeats at Preston and Huddersfield since then have seen the chasing pack close in on Albion, who still have a far superior goal difference to the sides below them.
Hughton's side were held to a 1-1 draw at home by Ipswich on Tuesday, but the four sides in the play-off places were all victorious.
They have three tricky fixtures remaining in February - a visit to Barnsley on Saturday before hosting fourth-placed Reading and leaders Newcastle.
"We have to remember we are second in the division," the 58-year-old added to BBC Sussex.
"There are too many good sides that are pushing really hard at the top end, but we have to look after our own results.
"We mustn't get too carried away, and have to work hard to make sure we stay there."
Albion fell short of winning promotion to the Premier League last season, finishing third in the table on goal difference and then being beaten in the play-off semi-finals by Sheffield Wednesday.
Midfielder Steve Sidwell has called for his team-mates to retain their composure during the run-in.
"Other teams can pick up points but as long as we do as well, that's fine," the 34-year-old said.
"When you are under pressure you have got to deliver. If you want to go up you need to deal with the pressure."
Sidwell is one of four Albion players to have won automatic promotion to the Premier League, winning the title with Reading in 2005-06, while Hughton led Newcastle to the Championship title in 2009-10.
"I've been there and done it and if I have to pass the experience on then that's what I'll do, but there is a time and place for that," Sidwell said.
"Nothing is given on a plate for you. These are the defining moments that matter and to be a part of it is what we are all here for.
"We have a group of players that can do it and it is just about making sure it happens." | Warrington councillors have agreed to accept an elected mayor as part of a future devolution deal.
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Brighton boss Chris Hughton says his squad must handle a dip in form to sustain their automatic promotion challenge in the Championship. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | One of his daughters insisted that public support was helping Mr Karimov recover and pleaded for people not to speculate over his condition.
Opposition news reports have suggested that Mr Karimov has died.
Mr Karimov, 78, has been leader of the former Soviet republic since before independence in 1991.
In the speech, remarks attributed to Mr Karimov congratulated Uzbeks on independence, which was said to have removed the "chains of totalitarian regime" and given Uzbeks an "opportunity to build a free and prosperous life".
Uzbekistan opens up on president's health
Profile: Islam Karimov
On Sunday, the Uzbek government admitted Mr Karimov was receiving treatment but did not give details.
The BBC's Abdujalil Abdurasulov says that the announcement caught many by surprise in authoritarian Uzbekistan, a country where any information about the president's health is treated like a state secret.
The next day, the president's daughter, Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva, confirmed that her father had suffered a brain haemorrhage.
Mr Karimov was last seen on state TV on 17 August, meeting the South Korean interior minister.
The president would always attend independence day celebrations.
The government cancelled some events, including a a concert on Wednesday and a fireworks show on Thursday.
Iain Theyers, 45, of Inverness, re-married in 2011 while apparently wedded to Marian Belahonia, 38, of Peru.
Ms Belahonia, who wanted to file for divorce, discovered through Facebook he had re-married, Hull Crown Court heard.
While ex-Robin Hood Airport manager Mr Theyers' conduct was "reprehensible" he had no case to answer, the judge said.
The couple met when Ms Belahonia moved to Nottingham while Mr Theyers was working at the airport, and married in 2006 at her parent's home in Peru, while pregnant with his child.
Ms Belahonia returned to Britain and was later granted full UK citizenship in 2013.
After their marriage deteriorated in 2010, she tracked him down on Facebook in an effort to file for a divorce, but then discovered he had married Louise Martin in 2011 at Bridlington Town Hall.
Mr Theyers claimed his marriage to Ms Belahonia in Peru was a sham to enable her to get a UK visa.
During a three-day trial Judge Jeremy Richardson QC, heard she paid $50 to "a man in the street with a brown envelope" to obtain a marriage certificate.
"I have no doubt the defendant has behaved in a reprehensible fashion," he said.
"He is not charged with immigration evasion.
"Although he does not come out of this well, I have misgivings about the validity of the marriage among the experts and that is not proper to leave to a jury."
Giving his ruling, Judge Richardson said: "The Crown expert appeared astounded the Peruvian authorities allowed the marriage to go ahead... and ruled the marriage was voidable."
However, he stressed he was not ruling on whether the marriage was a sham or not - as that should be an issue dealt with by a family court.
The 22-year-old moved to the Tykes from Brentford in June 2015, and had also been linked with Sunderland.
He scored seven goals to help Barnsley win the 2015-16 League One play-offs and Football League Trophy.
In Swansea's statement announcing the deal, they described Mawson as "one of the most gifted young defenders in the Football League".
The player, who was at Maidenhead United in the Conference South less than three years ago, told the club's website: "The last couple of seasons have been mad for me but I have enjoyed it.
"I have had some ups and some downs, but ultimately it's led me to signing for Swansea so I am not complaining.
"Coming here is a fantastic opportunity for me. Two-and-a-half or three years ago I was playing in the Conference.
"It's a big leap, a big step up for me, even from the Championship, but it's an opportunity I am going to try to grab with both hands."
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. | A state TV presenter in Uzbekistan has read out an independence day speech on behalf of President Islam Karimov, who is said to have suffered a stroke.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man who wed a woman while already married has been cleared of bigamy after a judge accepted his first wedding may not have been legal.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Swansea City have completed the signing of Barnsley defender Alfie Mawson on a four-year contract. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | UKOG said light sweet oil rose from 900 metres below ground level at a rate of 463 barrels per day.
Its shares rose 38% to 1.9p following the flow test at the Horse Hill site in the Weald basin, West Sussex.
Executive chairman Stephen Sanderson said the test was significant.
"Importantly, tests so far show oil has flowed to the surface under its own pressure and has not, so far, required artificial lift," he said.
The company says it could produce up to 500 barrels of oil a day.
According to Mr Sanderson, additional extraction techniques could further increase flow rates.
David Lenigas, the former chairman of UKOG, had claimed that there could "multiple billion" barrels of oil across the Weald, which stretches across the South East corner of England.
It was originally suggested there could be as much as 100 billion barrels of oil in that region.
However, the most recent assessment by Schlumberger, the oil services company, predicted there were 10.9 billion barrels of oil in the 55 square mile area covered by UKOG's licences.
UKOG has a 30% direct investment in Horse Hill Developments, which is drilling the site.
Some environmental groups say that getting what oil there is there could prove tricky and is only possible through fracking, a controversial extraction method for oil and gas.
Protestors gathered at the Horse Hill site last Saturday to demonstrate against the use of fracking.
UKOG has said that it does not intend to use fracking to extract the oil. | UK Oil & Gas (UKOG), the company behind the plan to extract oil from the Gatwick area, says oil has flowed to the surface at a faster rate than expected. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | Using data collected by Nasa's Lunar Prospector mission in the late 1990s, scientists spotted two hydrogen-rich regions near the Moon's poles, probably indicating the presence of water ice.
The icy patches are opposite each other - the line between them passes through the middle of the Moon - so it appears that this used to be its spin axis.
The work appears in the journal Nature.
It describes a gradual wobble, or "true polar wander", adding up to about a six-degree shift altogether.
A likely explanation for this shift, which the researchers suggest took place over several billion years, is volcanic activity in a region called the Procellarum.
This swathe of territory includes most of the Moon's dark patches that are visible from the Earth. Volcanoes and associated geological activity would have made it warmer and lighter than the rest of the Moon.
According to Matt Siegler, from the Planetary Science Institute in Arizona, and his colleagues, that drop in density produced enough wobble to explain the two "palaeopoles" they detected in the Lunar Prospector data.
"The Procellarum region was most geologically active early in lunar history, which implies that polar wander initiated billions of years ago," they write.
Dr Siegler and his colleagues discovered the hydrogen-rich patches in data from the Lunar Prospector's neutron spectrometer: measuring the neutrons bounced off the Moon's surface by incoming cosmic rays.
That hydrogen signal is taken to indicate the presence of water ice, which can - and does - exist in permanently shaded craters at the Moon's poles.
Precisely why it has persisted in these regions, which have now drifted away from the poles and into sunlight, is a mystery.
The researchers suggest it may have been buried by asteroid impacts, but this will require further investigation.
Previous studies have suggested that the Moon may have wobbled around to an even greater extent - perhaps as much as 35 degrees.
The lead author of one of those earlier papers, Ian Garrick-Bethell from the University of California Santa Cruz, wrote in a comment piece for Nature: "A key goal will be to reconcile these many stories of the changing orientation of the Moon, and to determine what density changes drove it to wander." | The Moon used to spin on a different axis and show a slightly different face to the Earth, a new study suggests. |
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