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What is the summary of the provided article? | Lee has not played for the region since April, having been injured on Wales' summer tour of New Zealand.
Scott Williams will make his 100th appearance for the region while DTH van der Merwe's return on the wing means Liam Williams moves to full-back.
Scarlets beat Connacht in their last outing, while Treviso were 27-11 winners against Newport Gwent Dragons.
Scarlets head coach Wayne Pivac had the trip to Treviso marked down as a tough assignment even before the Italian team's impressive win against Newport Gwent Dragons last week.
"We've won all our games in Italy in the past we haven't won them comfortably," he said.
"They really focus on their home games. There's a lot of travel involved and different conditions - it's warmer and humid, things we don't normal run into. They are a definite threat.
"They've got a new coach and they are moving a lot more ball and they have a big kicking game. We have to be clever."
Form guide: Scarlets registered their first points of the season thanks to 17-8 win over Connacht last Saturday while Treviso bounced back from their hammering by Ospreys to beat Newport Gwent Dragons 27-11.
Historically, Scarlets lead the series against Treviso 8-4, but the Italian team have won their last three meetings with Welsh regions.
Benetton Treviso: Jayden Hayward, Angelo Esposito, Tommaso Benvenuti, Alberto Sgarbi (C ), Luke McLean; Tommaso Allan, Giorgio Bronzini; Alberto De Marchi, Ornel Gega, Simone Ferrari, Marco Fuser, Filo Paulo, Francesco Minto, Dean Budd, Abraham Steyn.
Replacements: Luca Bigi, Matteo Zanusso, Cherif Traore, Filippo Gerosa, Marco Lazzaroni, Tito Tebaldi, Ian McKinley, Andrea Buondonno.
Scarlets: Liam Williams, DTH van der Merwe, Hadleigh Parkes, Scott Williams, Steff Evans; Rhys Patchell, Gareth Davies; Wyn Jones, Ken Owens [c], Samson Lee, Lewis Rawlins, David Bulbring, Aaron Shingler, 7 James Davies, John Barclay.
Replacements: Ryan Elias, Luke Garrett, Werner Kruger, Rynier Bernardo, Morgan Allen, Aled Davies, Aled Thomas, Steff Hughes
Referee: Gary Conway (IRFU, 23rd competition game)
Assistant Referees: Nigel Correll (IRFU), Simone Boaretto (FIR)
Citing Commissioner: Francesco Grillo (FIR)
Betts joined in 2010, coaching a season in the Championship before Widnes returned to Super League in 2012.
"We have a different quality of player. Our driving force over the next few years is to keep getting better," he told BBC Radio Merseyside.
"We want to be in the top half of the table and we don't want to sit in the bottom half."
After narrowly missing out on participating in the inaugural Super 8s last season, Betts says now his squad has improved they can aim higher this season.
"Every year the squad's got a little bit better and I can say with my hand on heart this is the best squad I've had in the five years I've been involved in Super League," he added.
"It's not top eight, it's top six, possibly top four, they are the things we are reaching for."
After winning their opening 2016 Super League fixture against Wakefield 24-16, Betts warned of the difficulty they face in their next fixture against reigning champions Leeds Rhinos.
"We're going to play the first or second best side in the world. We know that we've got to challenge that and we need to be more accurate and show more composure.
"They're not massive on shape and finding points in the field, they just keep stressing you with offloads and the ability they've got in individuals." | Wales tight-head Samson Lee will make his first appearance of the season in Scarlets' Pro12 trip to Treviso.
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Widnes head coach Denis Betts says his current side is the best Vikings team he has ever coached in Super League. |
Write a summary of this document. | A suspicious object was found on Newtownards Road at about 22:00 GMT on Wednesday.
Army bomb disposal experts examined the object and have declared it to be a hoax.
The Newtownards Road was closed between Holywood Road and Grampian Avenue, but reopened to traffic just after 01:00 GMT on Thursday.
Naomi Long, Alliance Party MP for east Belfast, said: "This incident is yet another senseless attack on the whole community, with the business and residential life of the local area again subjected to unnecessary disruption." | A security alert at the Alliance party offices in east Belfast has ended. |
Summarize the information given below. | The British world champion, who trails the German by 36 points in the championship after three races, was just 0.068 seconds ahead of Rosberg.
Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel, who has a five-place grid penalty, was third, but 0.604secs adrift of the Mercedes.
Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen was fourth, ahead of Williams' Felipe Massa.
Qualifying is live on the BBC Sport website and 5 live Sports Extra at 13:00 BST.
Hamilton is determined to win this race and narrow the gap Rosberg has built up with three straight wins and a difficult start to the season for the 31-year-old.
If anything, Rosberg was the more consistent of the two drivers during a fascinating session in which the low abrasiveness of the Sochi track enabled drivers to keep pushing hard on the tyres for several laps, an unusual phenomenon with these high-degradation Pirelli tyres.
Hamilton had a number of runs in which he was quickest of all in one or two sectors, but made errors in another.
But he saved the best for last, jumping to the top of the timesheet with his final fastest lap.
Mercedes appear comfortably clear of Ferrari - and their biggest threat for a win, if they have one, has effectively been removed with Vettel's penalty.
Williams, who have had a difficult start to the season, have had an encouraging weekend so far, with Massa's team-mate Valtteri Bottas in sixth ahead of the Toro Rosso of Max Verstappen.
Jenson Button - who is very strong on the Sochi street track - raised McLaren hopes of getting into the final qualifying session for the first time in their new Honda era with the eighth fastest time, four places and 0.4secs ahead of his two-time champion team-mate Fernando Alonso.
The two McLarens were separated by the second Toro Rosso of Carlos Sainz, Force India's Sergio Perez, who had a spin at Turn 13 early in the session, and Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo, who did his fastest lap out of sequence earlier in the session.
Russian Grand Prix final practice results
Russian Grand Prix coverage details | Lewis Hamilton pipped Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg in the final practice session before qualifying at the Russian Grand Prix. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The report looked at 85 stillbirths in detail and found care could have been better in at least two-thirds of cases.
In some cases, mothers were not offered the right tests, despite concerns their babies had stopped moving.
Experts said it was disappointing the areas of concern remained the same as those in a similar report 15 years ago.
There are more than 3,600 stillbirths every year in the UK - and despite improvements over the past few years, the rate remains one of the highest across Europe.
The inquiry, led by the University of Leicester, focused on stillbirths that happened at full term and had no congenital abnormalities. These make up about a third of all cases.
In almost half of the cases, women had contacted their maternity units concerned their babies' movements had slowed, changed or stopped. But in 50% of these instances, there had been "missed opportunities to potentially save the baby".
For example, investigations had not always been offered when appropriate, or when babies' heart rates had been monitored, traces had sometimes been misinterpreted by staff.
Many women at a higher risk of stillbirth - such as those at risk of diabetes - had not been checked properly or closely monitored.
And in some cases staff had not acted even when it had been clear the foetus had failed to grow as expected.
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists president Dr David Richmond said: "Although fewer babies in the UK are stillborn today, it's desperately disappointing that the four recommendations from this report remain exactly the same as when the last confidential enquiry took place 15 years ago.
"Today's report suggests six in 10 of these stillbirths are potentially avoidable.
"We can and should do better by the 1,000 families affected by stillbirths that occur before a woman goes into labour each year in the UK."
Elizabeth Hutton, chief executive of the Count the Kicks charity, said: "Many women who contact us think their babies could have been saved if basic guidelines had been followed and they often feel that they are not always taken seriously when they contact a healthcare professional with worries about reduced movement."
But Prof Jenny Kurinczuk, one of the lead members of the panel, said there was no clear magic bullet in this situation.
She added: "We have to prevent stillbirths one by one to ensure that as a nation we are able to reduce our stillbirth rate to those rates experienced by our European neighbours."
Separately, the report praised examples of "excellent" bereavement care, where midwives provided long-term support for families "in a way that surpassed normal expectations."
The inquiry was conducted by a team of academics, clinicians and charity representatives called MBRRACE-UK and looked at cases that took place in 2013.
Last week the Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, announced plans to reduce the stillbirths, neonatal and maternal deaths in England by 50% by 2030. | Hospitals are missing key opportunities to save the lives of hundreds of babies in the UK, an investigation into stillbirths has found. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Using information gathered from 2000 to 2014, Greenpeace said Chinese companies had fished in prohibited grounds or under-declared their catches.
Boats either turned off their identification systems or transmitted false location data, it added.
One company's fishing capacity off the coast of Guinea Bissau is said to have exceeded its authorised limit by 61%.
The absence of efficient fisheries management in some West African states allows rogue companies to plunder marine resources, the BBC's Thomas Fessy reports from Dakar in Senegal.
In less than a month, Greenpeace documented an average of one new case of illegal practice by a Chinese-owned boat every two days, but the report's authors say they think that is only the "tip of the iceberg."
Chinese companies were "unlawfully exploiting West Africa's marine environment," said Rashid King, head of Greenpeace East Asia's China Ocean Campaign, in a statement.
"They were taking advantage of weak enforcement from local and Chinese authorities to the detriment of local fisherman and the environment."
Mr Kang said unless the Chinese government controlled rogue fishermen, it would "seriously jeopardise" its mutually beneficial partnership with West Africa.
China came to West Africa's aid during the Ebola outbreak, Mr Kang said, but Chinese companies were "exploiting" West Africa's marine environment.
In the most recent cases, the Greenpeace ship MY Esperanza, which sailed off Senegal, Guinea-Bissau and Guinea last autumn, documented 16 illegal fishing activities by 12 Chinese vessels.
Over the last 15 years, Greenpeace has also investigated illegal fishing practices by EU, Korean and Russian fishing vessels in Africa.
From 1985 to 2013, China expanded its Africa fishing operations from 13 to 462 vessels.
The vessels were mostly bottom trawlers, which Greenpeace calls "one of the most destructive fishing vessels in the industry". | More than 70 Chinese vessels have been found fishing illegally off the coast of West Africa, Greenpeace says. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Proposals to build a new hospital or switch services between those in Telford and Shrewsbury were delayed by the election.
But now they are being delayed further to wait for government funding plans and to ensure options being discussed are realistic, health bosses said.
Shropshire Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) expected a 10-week delay.
Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals Trust has previously said it was unrealistic to keep two A&Es.
The emergency departments at the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital and Telford's Princess Royal have struggled to hit waiting time targets over recent years. | Plans to change some NHS services in Shropshire have been put back for a second time. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | It will last four days, with the decision expected in the new year.
Theresa May has said she is "clear" she expects to start talks on leaving the EU as planned by the end of March.
Campaigners say MPs and peers have to scrutinise the government's plans beforehand, but ministers say they can decide without this happening.
The High Court ruled last Thursday that Parliament should have a say before the UK invokes Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty - which triggers up to two years of formal EU withdrawal talks.
Labour has said it will not attempt to delay or scupper this process if a vote goes ahead but pressure is mounting on the government from the devolved legislatures.
The Scottish government is pressing for the Holyrood Parliament to be given a binding vote on Article 50 and will seek to oppose the UK government as it makes the case for its own involvement in the decision.
The Welsh government has also said it intends to intervene in the appeal process to clarify the implications of the judgement for the future of devolution in Wales and the respective powers of the UK executive and the Welsh Assembly.
And Northern Ireland's top lawyer has said a separate legal challenge to Brexit should "leapfrog" the usual legal process and go directly to the Supreme Court.
The government said it was going to appeal almost as soon as the ruling came out and the Supreme Court has now granted permission - pushing through the process at a far faster pace than usual because of the importance of the case.
After Lord Toulson's retirement this summer, the appeal will be heard by all 11 remaining Supreme Court justices, led by their President Lord Neuberger.
At the completion of legal submissions, the justices will reserve their decision to a date "probably in the new year", a spokesman for the court said.
He added: "The Supreme Court will sit in its largest courtroom and make available a live video feed in the other two courtrooms in the building to enable as many members of the public as possible to observe proceedings.
"It should be added that, as with all Supreme Court proceedings, this appeal will be live streamed on our website, so it is not necessary for people to attend the building in person to watch the hearing."
On Monday, Mrs May said: "We believe the government has got strong legal arguments. We'll be putting those arguments to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court will make its judgement."
The lead claimant in the case against the government, investment fund manager Gina Miller, has said it is vital that the UK's negotiating position is voted upon by MPs. She added that for this not to happen would mean ministers were acting like a "tin-pot" dictatorship.
There is some debate about whether a vote at Westminster on invoking Article 50 would require a full Act of Parliament, or whether it could happen much more speedily by MPs and peers agreeing to a resolution - a written motion - instead.
But Brexit Secretary David Davis has suggested a full Act of Parliament is more likely should the government lose its case.
In June's UK-wide referendum, voters opted by 51.9% to 48.1% in favour of leaving the EU.
It follows three years of wrangling over the plans and a legal battle with a rival scheme.
The proposals for the facility in Northop were initially rejected by councillors, but approved following a planning inquiry.
It will now be sited on land between Kelsterton and Oakenholt Lanes in the village.
"We are currently finalising our remaining pre-commencement conditions with the hope of starting on site in July," said Jamieson Hodgson, from the Oxfordshire-based firm, Memoria.
"This means that we will aim to be open by mid-2018 so we can finally provide this much-needed public service facility to the people of Flintshire." | The government's appeal against the High Court ruling that MPs must vote on triggering Brexit will be heard in the Supreme Court from 5 December.
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A £5m project to build a crematorium in Flintshire will get under way in July, developers have said. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | Or has the threat of other countries rushing to hold popular votes as a way of putting pressure on the EU been somewhat exaggerated?
French Front National (FN) leader Marine Le Pen has long made it clear that if ever she came to power, she would not hesitate to push for a "Frexit" if she did not succeed in renegotiating the terms of France's membership of the bloc.
Meanwhile, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's announcement of a referendum on migrant quotas suggests that the temptation for populist leaders to hold plebiscites on EU policies that are unpopular with their citizens - to try to boost their own standing at home and possibly gain extra leverage within the bloc - can be all but irresistible.
Several of the former communist countries that joined the EU in 2004 resent any suggestion that "old guard" members such as France and Germany may be trying to dictate policy to the rest.
This suspicion has been exacerbated by the migrant crisis, which resurgent right-wing groups and populist politicians have seized on to push a Eurosceptic agenda.
Immediately after British Prime Minister David Cameron's announcement that Britain would hold a referendum on its continued EU membership on 23 June, the pro-EU Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka warned of the impact of a Brexit, saying that it could produce a "domino effect" that would result in a "wave of nationalism and separatism" sweeping across Europe.
Mr Sobotka hinted that there were some fringe right-wing groups in his country who would jump at the chance to push for a "Czexit", though he insisted that such a scenario would be "senseless and dangerous" and could even return the Czech Republic to Russia's sphere of influence.
However, not all Eastern European leaders appear to share Mr Sobotka's concerns over the possibility of deepening divisions within Europe.
The Hungarian premier has long delighted in firing shots across the EU's bows and last week Mr Orban seized on what has become a sore point with several countries: the EU's proposal for mandatory quotas for the resettlement of migrants. He announced that his government was planning to hold a referendum to gauge whether Hungarian citizens were prepared to accept such a proposal.
Hungary, like its fellow members of the Visegrad group (which also includes the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia), is still effectively a monocultural society.
Many Hungarians fear that an influx of migrants from the Middle East, Africa and Asia would dilute their cultural identity. Mr Orban is therefore apparently using a referendum on the quotas issue as a vote of confidence in his government's anti-migrant policies - and seems to be sure that it will go the way he wants.
Last month, European Council President Donald Tusk warned of the possibility of other EU leaders following the lead set by the Brexit referendum, saying that this path was "a very attractive model for some politicians in Europe to achieve some internal, very egotistic goals".
The Hungarian move may prove to be the first of a new wave of post-Brexit referendums.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook. | Do the warnings of "referendum contagion" triggered by the UK's Brexit poll have any substance? |
Summarize the information given below. | But South East Coast Ambulance (Secamb) said there was no evidence of patient harm, in an independently-led patient impact review published on Friday.
The review was requested by NHS Improvement, formerly Monitor, which said it would look at the findings.
Secamb was placed in special measures in September.
In the pilot, from December 2014 to February 2015, Secamb delayed sending help for certain 111 calls that had been transferred to the 999 system.
The calls were not those identified by 111 as potentially the most life-threatening, but included those at the next level of urgency, the report said.
The trust delayed dispatching ambulances to allow paramedic staff to call the patient or caller back to get more information and potentially downgrade or upgrade the call.
Secamb acting chief executive Geraint Davies said: "We are satisfied that this report, which was led by an independent and external clinician and which looked at 185,000 calls, has identified no evidence of patient harm attributable to the pilot.
"We do however recognise that there were significant governance and other failings."
The report said had effective clinical governance arrangements been in place it would have been easier to measure positive or negative effects on patients.
Recommendations included reviewing governance, making changes when planning projects, following best practice and training clinicians to required standards.
In a statement, NHS Improvement said: "We note the report states that there was no evidence of patient harm but the project cannot completely exclude any incident of harm occurred."
It added: "We will review the findings of this report to further support our work so that patients in the South East can be assured that they are getting the quality care they expect." | An NHS trust that delayed sending ambulances to gain time to assess some patients has admitted significant failings around the scheme. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Gray prevailed 6-0 in the knockout final, with Goubert taking silver.
Hosts Jersey took top honours in the archery compound event, with Great Britain international Lucy O'Sullivan winning gold, while Guernsey's Gen Witham claimed silver.
In the men's recurve head-to-head, Jersey's Mark Renouf took gold, his first ever Island Games medal.
Jersey's Rhys Hidrio battled back after his chain came off to win a silver medal in the mountain bike criterium.
Hidrio, who was fifth in the cross country after suffering a puncture, could not catch the Isle of Man's Nick Corlett who took gold.
Hidrio helped Howard Greenside, Ollie Lowthorpe, James Patterson and Richard Payne to win team silver.
Guernsey's James Roe took the bronze medal while he and his teammates Andrew Colver, Geoffrey Gibson, Michael Serafin and Danny Shaw won team bronze.
Guernsey's 16-year-old rider Megan Downton won her first-ever Island Games medal taking bronze in the women's criterium.
She finished behind Western Isles' Kerry and Kirsty Macphee, who had already won gold and silver in the cross-country.
Jersey's team of Jemima Leach, Catherine Liron and Helene Monpetit won team silver while Downton and Heather Despres teamed up to win bronze.
Jersey schoolgirl Natasha Forrest produced the best performance of her short career to make the semi-finals of the tennis singles at the Island Games.
The 14-year-old, who is the youngest player in the tournament, knocked out the Isle of Man's number two seed Laura Feely 7-6 3-6 10-8 on Wednesday.
Her place in the semi-final guarantees her a bronze medal to add to the team silver she won on Monday.
"I'm feeling amazing, I really didn't expect it," Forrest told BBC Jersey.
Meanwhile, Jersey's men's number one seed Scott Clayton overcame Guernsey's Dom McLuskey 7-6 6-2 to book his place in the last four of the singles.
Guernsey's Pat Ogier beat Jersey's James Connelly in straight sets, 6-3 6-1, in another of the all-Channel Islands quarter-final clashes.
The East Midlands Trains service was travelling from Leicester to York when it hit part of a conveyor wagon at Barrow upon Soar earlier this month.
A man working on the lorry was taken to hospital but the train did not derail and no passengers were hurt.
The Office of Road and Rail said it is also investigating.
The train had been travelling at 102mph (163 km/h) when it hit the boom of a conveyor wagon, which was sticking out over the line at Mountsorrel sidings, at 10:27 on 14 February.
The maximum speed for that section is 110mph (176 km/h), the RAIB said.
The driver applied the emergency brake and no-one on board the train was injured but the driver was described as being "badly shaken" by the incident.
The train was then taken at low speed to Loughborough where passengers were put on different trains to continue their journeys.
Both the RAIB and the Office of Road and Rail have confirmed they are investigating.
The Prince of Wales laid a wreath in the cemetery where some of the 144 victims of the tragedy on 21 October 1966 are buried. The message had gone by Sunday.
David Davies, chairman of trustees at the Aberfan Memorial Charity, said it was "sad" it had been taken.
South Wales Police said it was aware of the incident and was investigating.
Wales observed a minute's silence at 09:15 BST on Friday, 50 years after a mountain of coal waste from tip seven of Merthyr Vale Colliery slid down onto Aberfan and destroyed Pantglas Junior School and nearby homes.
Prince Charles spent much of Friday afternoon with families of those who died in the disaster and attended a reception before signing a book of remembrance.
He also read out a message from the Queen which said the spirit of the community proved "even the greatest loss cannot triumph over love". | Guernsey archer Lisa Gray beat team-mate Chantelle Goubert in the recurve head-to-head to take Island Games gold.
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A worker was seriously injured when a passenger train hit a conveyor belt hanging over the line, the Rail Accident Investigation Branch has said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A message from the wreath placed by Prince Charles on the 50th anniversary of the Aberfan disaster has been taken. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Sequencing fragments of DNA from water 1km (0.6 miles) below the surface can determine the type and quantity of fish present, say Danish scientists.
The DNA-based technique could be used for monitoring fish sustainably without having to catch them.
Fish populations are under pressure from over-fishing, pollution and climate change.
Dr Philip Francis Thomsen, of the University of Copenhagen, said the environmental DNA (eDNA) approach was "very universal", giving information on many fish, including flatfish, sharks and rays, and deep-sea species.
"We are basically doing equivalent to CSI [crime scene investigation] work for a biologist," he told BBC News.
"Investigating the biodiversity of the ocean by using environmental DNA as a proxy for what is actually living there."
Fish leave tiny bits of DNA in the water during their lives.
The genetic material is invisible to the naked eye, but can be extracted and sequenced, yielding a "DNA fingerprint of the ocean".
In the study, samples of seawater were taken by scientists during deepwater trawling off Greenland for research purposes.
All but two of 28 different types of fish captured had left traces of their DNA in seawater.
Another three were identified through their DNA alone. These included rare deep-sea species such as the angler fish.
The scientists then looked at two commercial fish species - the Greenland halibut and the redfish - in more detail.
They made a heat map of where most of the fish DNA was found.
And this map fitted "quite well" with the amount of fish actually caught.
"This is the first evidence that there is a quantitative relation," said Dr Thomsen.
"We could say that the biomass catch is actually reflected in the amount of DNA in the water samples.
"But if we can fine tune this method, we might be able to use this as a supplement to estimating stock sizes and potentially to more sustainable fishing."
Dr Thomsen sees two other practical applications for the approach:
The research is published in the journal, Plos One.
Follow Helen on Twitter. | Sampling DNA from seawater may be one way to check up on fish and other marine life, according to research. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | A hole measuring 3m sq (9 sq ft) and 1.3m (4ft) deep appeared in Ironbridge Road, last Boxing Day.
It was caused by workings in the underlying clay mines, weakening surrounding soils.
The road, rebuilt on top of a concrete slab held in place by 70 metal poles sunk into the ground, has been opened to traffic.
Geoff Beattie, based at the University of Manchester, has published research showing how people's green opinions can be contradicted by their gestures.
People "may care a good deal less" than the views they express, he says.
While words can be controlled, he says "gestures are difficult, if not impossible, to edit".
This research, by the psychologist who advises the Big Brother television show, will confirm the suspicions of those doubting the sincerity of the green credentials of some individuals and businesses.
Do hotel chains really want to save the planet - or do they want to save money by washing fewer towels?
Professor Beattie has been examining the gap between the public support for green values - and the different way people behave in practice.
Researchers, at the university's Sustainable Consumption Institute, made video recordings of people talking about issues such as global warming - looking at how their words matched their body language, such as hand gestures and expressions.
The study found that while people could control their speech to express green opinions, their unconscious gestures suggested their "true thoughts and feelings" lay elsewhere.
This could help to explain the difference between what people said and how they made personal decisions, such as what they bought in the supermarket.
"This research shows there are 'green fakers' out there, who say one thing but believe another," says Professor Beattie.
"This material shows for the first time a behaviour clash between what people espouse openly and explicitly on green attitudes and what they hold unconsciously and implicitly.
"Explicitly, people may want to save the planet and appear green, but implicitly they may care a good deal less.
"Given it is these implicit attitudes that direct and control much of our behaviour in supermarkets and elsewhere, these are the attitudes that we have to pursue and understand and change."
The research is to be published as a book called Why Aren't We Saving The Planet? A Psychologist's Perspective.
Bomb-making materials were found in the flat where the man, named as Xu, lived, and the words "die" and "death" had been scrawled on the walls.
The blast happened just as parents in Fengxian in the eastern province of Jiangsu were picking up their children at the end of the day.
It is being treated as a criminal act.
Xu had suffered from health problems and had dropped out of school but was employed, police said.
More than 60 people were injured in the explosion, including eight who are in a serious condition, the authorities say.
A survivor told Chinese state TV that the kindergarten gate had just opened for children to leave but none had come out when the blast happened.
Fengxian officials said none of the children or teachers at the kindergarten were among the casualties.
The Fengxian blast is the second tragedy to strike a Chinese kindergarten in recent weeks.
Last month, 11 children died when a bus packed with kindergarten pupils burst into flames inside a tunnel in eastern Shandong province.
It later emerged that the fire had been started deliberately by the driver, who also died.
There have also been knife attacks at schools in recent years. In January a man with a kitchen knife wounded 11 children at a kindergarten in southern China's Guangxi province.
Last February a knifeman stabbed 10 children outside a primary school in the island of Hainan in southern China before killing himself.
Such attacks have generally been attributed to people with personal grudges or suffering from mental health problems.
However Chinese leaders have in the past also acknowledged that underlying social tensions have contributed to the crimes. | Work to repair a collapsed road in Jackfield, Shropshire, has been completed two weeks early.
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There are many "green fakers" who only pretend to be eco-friendly, claims a psychologist who has been studying what is revealed by body language.
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An explosion at the gates of a Chinese kindergarten that killed eight people was caused by a 22-year-old man who died in the blast, police say. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | "Can you bring Trump here?" he asked the audience, as he introduced a screening of his film The Libertine.
After receiving jeers from the crowd, he added: "You misunderstand completely. When was the last time an actor assassinated a president?"
"I want to clarify," he added, "I'm not an actor. I lie for a living [but] it's been a while. Maybe it's about time."
The star acknowledged that his comments - which may have been a reference to the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln by actor John Wilkes Booth in 1865 - would prove controversial.
"By the way, this is going to be in the press and it'll be horrible," he said. "It's just a question, I'm not insinuating anything."
He is not the first US celebrity to allude to killing the president.
At a rally in Washington DC, Madonna said she thought "an awful lot about blowing up the White House" and the US rapper Snoop Dogg shot a toy gun at a Donald Trump character in a music video.
But on social media, some have criticised Depp's comments - which come days after a gunman shot and injured Republican congressman and four others in Virginia in the US.
"Casual Johnny Depp: 'When was the last time an actor assassinated a President?' GOP reps targeted & shot days ago," tweeted one user, Chet Cannon, referring to the incident.
The US Secret Service is aware of Depp's comments, according to US media reports.
Festival-goers in Somerset met his comments about President Trump with laughter, albeit mixed with shock.
Depp - wearing distressed jeans and a black fedora - was mobbed by fans as he arrived at Worthy Farm.
Speaking to the BBC afterwards, one fan was more concerned with meeting her idol than analysing his politics.
"I don't even know what to say. I'm going to die," said Jess Gallagher. "He reached out and touched my hand and I don't know what to do.
"He's an amazing actor and I've loved him ever since I studied him in year 11 in A-Level drama. I can't cope!"
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | Actor Johnny Depp appeared to threaten US President Donald Trump during a speech at the Glastonbury Festival. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Che Labastide-Wellington, 17, was stabbed in the heart at the 16th birthday party in Kenton, north-west London, on 7 November 2015.
Walker Sesay, 19, of Wembley, north-west London, was found guilty at the Old Bailey of manslaughter.
Three other men, aged between 18 and 23, were found guilty of wounding with intent.
The trial heard a "small army" of men attacked Che and one of his friends, who was also stabbed several times.
The attack was the result of a feud between people on neighbouring north-west London estates, the jury was told.
Prosecuting, Crispin Aylett QC said a flyer for the event was posted on Instagram which meant "inevitably a number of people who had not been invited got to hear about it".
He added: "Once the defendants' group had arrived... they immediately attacked as a group - surrounding Che and his friends.
Mr Labastide-Wellington, who was believed to have been carrying a knife himself, was stabbed once in the chest and collapsed in a nearby alleyway.
Rimmel Williams, 18, of Willesden, north-west London, Calvin Tudor, 22, of Willesden, and Marlon Tudor, 23, of no fixed address, were found guilty of wounding with intent.
Omar Afrah, 22, and Olamilekan Onafowokan, 23, both of Wembley, were found guilty of conspiracy to commit violent disorder.
They will all be sentenced on 6 December.
Ibrahim Mansaray, 18, of Acton, west London, and a 15-year-old from Willesden, who cannot be named, were acquitted of all charges. | A man has been found guilty of killing a teenager at a party advertised on social media platform Instagram. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | The statement calls for a new "pluralistic regime that represents all sectors" in Syria, Reuters report.
It also stresses that President Bashar al-Assad and his aides could play no part in any transitional period.
There are conflicting reports as to whether the powerful rebel group Ahrar al-Sham signed the statement.
It had earlier complained that figures it regarded as too close to the government were being given too prominent a role, and pulled out.
But Reuters news agency said the group had signed the copy of the statement at the end of the two-day talks.
The story of the Syrian conflict
Who are the groups fighting Assad?
Where key countries stand
World powers want negotiations between a unified opposition delegation and President Bashar al-Assad's government on a political solution to the four-and-a-half-year conflict to start by 1 January.
Opposition groups had previously demanded Assad leave before any negotiations took place. But the statement says he would be allowed to stay until a transitional government was formed.
This signifies "a big change" on behalf of the opposition, Ibrahim Hamidi, the Syria editor of the Saudi owned al-Hayat newspaper, told the BBC.
What's important about the Riyadh meeting is that it creates a framework and mechanism for a broad spectrum of the Syrian opposition and rebels to engage in settlement negotiations with the regime.
That is what the Americans and others were looking for, as a prelude to another planned meeting of the outside powers - including Russia and Iran - later this month to prepare for rebel-regime negotiations in early January.
But that doesn't mean it's going to be plain sailing.
Can Syria opposition unite?
More than 250,000 people have been killed since an uprising against Mr Assad began in March 2011. Eleven million others have been forced from their homes.
The two-day conference in the Saudi capital brought together representatives of the main Western-backed political opposition alliance, the National Coalition, and of the National Co-ordination Committee, which is mostly tolerated by the authorities in Damascus although some of its members have been harassed and detained.
Most of the main rebel factions, including Ahrar al-Sham, also sent delegations.
Reuters quoted a joint statement as saying that delegates had backed a "democratic mechanism through a pluralistic regime that represents all sectors of the Syrian people". It would include women and would not discriminate on religious, sectarian or ethic grounds, the statement added.
Delegates also committed to preserving state institutions and restructuring the security forces.
Mr Assad's staunch ally Russia - which launched an air campaign in September to prop up his government - supports the implementation of the 2012 Geneva Communique, which calls for the establishment of a transitional administration.
But the president has said his departure is out of the question before elections are held, and recently warned that peace talks could not begin while the country was occupied by "terrorists" - a term he uses to describe all opponents.
US Secretary of State John Kerry meanwhile said that the new International Syrian Support Group - which includes the Arab League, the EU, the UN and 17 countries - was "working toward the potential of a meeting in New York" on 18 December.
The Syrian Kurds, who control large parts of northern Syria, were not invited to Riyadh. They held their own conference, at the same time, on the future of Syria. | A meeting of Syrian opposition politicians and rebels in Riyadh has produced a statement of principles to guide peace talks with the government. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | The 19-year-old, who made his first-class debut in June, should become the first Jerseyman to represent England.
"It's going to be the most remarkable occasion," said Jenner's dad Ward, also chairman of the Jersey Cricket Board.
"He's now got to turn up at 08:00 BST tomorrow in a suit, which his mum is flying over to him."
He added: "Jonty will meet his mum at Gatwick tonight to get his suit - hopefully it'll be dry-cleaned in time."
Jenner, who is yet to make his County Championship bow, scored 68 against South Africa A last month for Sussex having spent most of the season playing for their second team.
The 12th man role is given to specialist fielders, with Jenner coming on as a substitute if a member of the team gets injured.
His father added that Carl Hopkinson, fielding coach at Sussex, recommended Jenner for the role.
"I didn't quite believe it at first, but when he told me more about how it came about there was some logic to it," he added to BBC Sport.
"Carl recognises, like a lot of people, that Jonty's one of the best fielders in the country. He has close links with the England setup and Jonty was then asked if he fancied it, which he obviously did.
"I imagine it's almost 100% certain he'll get on the pitch at some stage." | Jersey and Sussex batsman Jonty Jenner has been named as 12th man for England's first Test against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Thursday. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Craig Curran gave the visitors a deserved lead after latching onto Liam Boyce's through ball.
Two quick fire second half goals turned the game around; Adam Rooney finishing Niall McGinn's cutback before Jonny Hayes found the top corner.
Kenny McLean provided the third; playing in McGinn who outpaced the County defence and poked in a third.
Ross County were in control of the game during an opening period where the Dons looked to be suffering from the sort of dip in form that has seen them slip from comfortable leaders in the title race to seven points adrift prior to this clash.
The transformation after the break was amazing and certainly a major surprise for the Staggies players as they were picked apart down their right flank where all three Aberdeen goals originated.
A Dons team that lost just three goals in their first eight games conceded 16 in their second eight so it was no surprise that manager Derek McInnes altered his side.
Not that they had much time to settle into that new set-up before the Staggies hit the front after an industrious and determined start from the visitors.
Boyce dispossessed Mark Reynolds on the half way line and while the defender claimed in vain for handball the Northern Ireland international burst forward at speed.
He then played in Curran on the right side of the penalty area and from an acute angle he drilled in a fifth goal of the season despite Shay Logan's attempts to rescue things.
By then Rooney had passed up a half chance created by McGinn's wickedly flighted free kick, but the Irishman hooked the loose ball high over the crossbar.
The same combination once again left the County defenders spectators, but on that occasion Rooney could only steer a diving header wide of the far post.
The Dons still looked nervy whenever County pushed forward, but the closest they came to a second goal was a long range free kick from Jackson Irvine that flashed well wide of the post.
Whatever McInnes said to his players at the interval certainly worked as the Aberdeen players who left the field to a chorus of boos at half time were being cheered to the rafters within minutes of the restart.
They played with more pace and aggression while McGinn produced a moment of magic to set up the leveller for Rooney with a dummy that left poor Marcus Fraser spinning.
He then set up the Dons top scorer with the sort of perfect cross that invited the shot into the roof of the net that it received from eight yards.
Two minutes later Hayes tormented County on the left side of the box and his shot come cross dipped under the bar and into the net for his fifth goal of the season.
It was a stunning setback for the visitors given how well they played in the first half and try as they might to recover they only rarely threatened an Aberdeen side playing with more confidence.
When they did Boyce sent a diving header from substitute Jonathan Franks too close to goalkeeper Danny Ward who managed to claw the ball away.
Then just to rub it in McGinn got the reward for a fine performance by drilling in the third goal when stabbing in McLean's cross. | Aberdeen recovered from a poor first half to beat Ross County and move to second in the Scottish Premiership. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Members will also be working to rule and adhering to a 37.5 hour week between 13 October and 9 November.
Earlier this week, the Unison union said its members would go on strike on the 13th between 07.00 and 11.00.
Unions are angry with the government over its 1% pay rise offer for NHS health workers.
This does not apply to those who get automatic, on-the-job pay increases, which are given to about half of staff and are worth 3% a year on average.
The decision by ministers went against the recommendation of the independent pay review board, which called for an across-the-board rise.
Unite members in Northern Ireland will be striking between 11.00 and 15.00 on 13 October.
During the Bridgend raid, a businessman, 58, was arrested on suspicion of money laundering.
Cash is suspected of being generated from overseas organised crime.
A City of London Police investigation was launched in March after it received intelligence a UK bank account was being used.
Police believe that cash was generated through overseas organised crime - including Ponzi schemes - and on foreign exchange markets, before it was laundered through the man's company bank account.
The business is listed as being involved in test drilling and boring with an annual turnover of £250,000.
But in November 2015, £13.2m ($19m) was transferred into its account, converted to Euros, with most sent on to Georgia.
Then in February 2016, a further £29.1m (€37m) was transferred into the account, with the arrested man claiming it was for the purchase of a Sri Lankan tea company.
In a statement, City of London Police said it believed the £30m of bankers' drafts was the "the biggest ever money seizure made by UK law enforcement".
"We believe this man's business account was being used by a global network of organised crime operators to launder tens of millions of pounds of stolen funds through the UK and then out into bank accounts around the world," said Det Insp Craig Mullish, from the City of London Police's money laundering unit. | Unite members working in the health service in England will join a four-hour strike on 13 October, the union has said.
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Bankers' drafts worth £30m have been found in what is believed to be the biggest ever money seizure made by UK police. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | Hartlepool funeral director Gerald Martin, 66, is accused of sexually abusing five teenage boys over a 20 year period from the 1970s.
Mr Martin, of Valley Close, denies all the charges.
Teesside Crown Court heard the alleged abuse came to light in 2013 when a man told a nurse he had been assaulted.
He had visited the University Hospital of North Tees' accident and emergency department suffering from suicidal thoughts.
Prosecutors said that, after reports of Mr Martin's first appearance at court, four other people came forward to say they had also been abused by him.
Some would give evidence that they had been sexually abused in public toilets, the court was told.
One man told police he was about 12 or 13 years old when, walking home after playing with friends, he stopped at some public toilets.
There he was allegedly grabbed by Mr Martin and dragged into a car, taken to the funeral parlour and sexually assaulted, he said.
Another man said the accused had winked at him at a family funeral, years after he abused him.
Mr Martin was described as being well known in Hartlepool, with a high profile position.
The court heard he had told police he was gay but that his wife did not know.
The trial continues. | A boy was grabbed from a public toilet, bundled into a car and sexually abused at a funeral parlour, a court heard. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Sarah McManus, 29, is said to be among those hurt on the "tower jump" at the Flip Out Park in Chester.
The personal assistant, from Oswestry, Shropshire, said she fractured her spine jumping into a foam pit from a 13ft (4m) high platform in January.
A spokesman for Cheshire trampoline park said the tower jump has been replaced by another attraction.
Miss McManus, who is taking legal action against the park, said: "I followed the instructions on the sign and landed in the seated position as suggested, but when I hit the foam I heard a crack in my back and felt like I'd been winded.
"I was barely able to breathe and couldn't shout for help, so I had to throw some of the foam sponges in the air to get attention."
She added: "I was eventually fitted with a back brace that I wear daily and only remove to shower and sleep."
Following her injury, three other people all reportedly suffered back injuries on the same attraction.
One was student George Magraw, 21, from Ellesmere Port, who fractured his spine at the park in February.
Cheshire West and Chester Council has launched an investigation into the park.
The council said two other people were injured on the same day as Mr Magraw.
A spokesman for Flip Out Chester said: "Since opening in December, more than 200,000 people have visited Flip Out Chester and we have an excellent safety record.
"Safety is our number one priority and we strive to ensure that everyone who visits can enjoy all of the activities in a safe environment.
"We are investigating these claims to establish exactly what happened."
It is almost three times the figure for October, when the government launched a major offensive to retake the city of Mosul from so-called Islamic State.
The number of civilians killed in November was 926, while 930 others were injured.
The UN special representative for Iraq, Jan Kubis, said the casualty figures were "staggering".
"In its desperate attempt to cling on to territory it controls in Mosul and Nineveh areas, [IS] has been employing the most vicious tactics, using civilians' homes as firing positions as well as abducting and forcibly moving civilians, effectively using them as human shields," he added.
Mr Kubis noted that the Iraqi security forces had declared that they were making utmost efforts during the six-week-old Mosul offensive to avoid putting civilians in harm's way, often taking additional casualties as a result.
Baghdad province, where IS militants carried out a series of bombings last month, was the worst affected for civilian casualties, with 152 killed and 581 injured. In Nineveh province, where Mosul is located, 332 were killed and 114 injured.
No regional breakdown was provided for casualties among security forces personnel, who include members of the army, police officers engaged in combat, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, interior ministry troops, and militiamen.
The International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) meanwhile warned that the offensive to retake Mosul could take months, prompting more and more of the up to 1.5 million civilians believed to be living there to try to flee their homes.
Some 77,000 people have been displaced so far, with many staying in their homes as the government suggested.
On Wednesday, the UN warned that as many as half a million people in Mosul - including almost half of all the children in the city - had reportedly been cut off from access to clean water after a major water pipeline was damaged in the fighting.
The break in the pipeline is located in an area still held by IS, making it impossible to repair quickly.
The Iraqi authorities are currently bringing water into recaptured eastern districts by lorry, but the supply is not enough to meet the needs of residents.
Unless running water is restored in the next few days, the UN says, civilians will be forced to resort to unsafe water sources, exposing children to the risk of waterborne diseases such as severe diarrhoea and the threat of malnutrition. | A trampoline park is investigating claims four people were "seriously injured" on an attraction in one month.
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At least 1,959 members of the Iraqi security forces were killed across the country in November, the UN says. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | The discharges are in breach of approvals but are said to be well within the overall site safety limit.
According to the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (Sepa), the gaseous tritium is from an authorised outlet but is greater than it should be.
The Chapelcross site ceased power generation in 2004.
Sepa staff have been to the facility a number of times to discuss the issue with the operators.
They say that while a sub-limit for gaseous disposals has been exceeded, it is a small fraction of the authorised disposal limit for the whole site.
On that basis, Sepa says it is confident there is no risk to the public or the environment, although investigations are continuing to find the reason for the increase.
Tritium - a radioactive isotope of hydrogen - was a by-product of the nuclear operations at Chapelcross and was used in the weapons industry.
Gaseous tritium is sometimes used for its radio-luminescence by makers of self-illuminating watches or signposts.
GE said it no longer posed "any conceivable threat to US financial stability".
US regulators labelled GE Capital a systemically important financial institution (SIFI) in 2013.
SIFIs fall under stricter regulations to protect the financial system.
The label is given by a group of US regulators - known as the Financial Stability Oversight Council- which includes the US Treasury Department and Federal Reserve.
Most SIFIs are banks such as JP Morgan and Citigroup, but the FSOC has labelled a number of institutions in this category, including insurance firms and non-bank lenders.
A spokesperson from the US Treasury Department said in a statement, "The council's authority to designate nonbank financial companies is a critical tool to address potential threats to financial stability."
The spokesperson said there was a "clear process for de-designation" but gave no timeline for addressing GE's application.
The SIFI designation was developed as part of the 2010 Wall Street reforms, after the US public was forced to bailout Wall Street banks and insurer AIG.
The label is given to institutions whose collapse could have a significant impact on the financial system and the economy. It requires them to hold excess funds to protect against a collapse.
The government argued that because insurance firms and non-bank lenders have ties to many other financial institutions and hold large amounts of financial obligations, their collapse could be detrimental to the US economy.
GE announced in April 2015 that it would be reducing the size of GE Capital and focusing on industrial and manufacturing financing.
"Our plan to change our business model, shrink the company and reduce our risk profile has been successful," said GE Capital chief executive, Keith Sherin.
"We believe GE Capital no longer meets the criteria to be designated as a SIFI and we look forward to working co-operatively and constructively with the FSOC through the rescission process," he said.
On Wednesday, US insurance firm MetLife won a court battle to remove its "too big to fail" label.
MetLife filed a lawsuit in 2015 arguing the regulators had violated their own rules when it placed the insurer in the same category as large banks.
"From the beginning, MetLife has said that its business model does not pose a threat to the financial stability of the United States. This decision is a win for MetLife's customers, employees and shareholders," Steven Kandarian, MetLife's chief executive said in a statement.
The decision was a blow to regulators and could mean more non-bank SIFIs appeal against the "too big to fail" tag in court, rather than reducing their size like GE.
The Treasury Department said on Wednesday that it "strongly disagreed" with the judges decision.
"We are confident that FSOC's determination was lawful and will continue to defend the Council's designations process vigorously," a spokesperson said.
Data was provided by the Electoral Commission and may be subject to change.
Follow the results on our live blog and on the local results page here.
S4C is showing a live results programme from 22:00 BST, which is also being broadcast on Radio Cymru and can be watched on iPlayer, while there will be updates from BBC Wales on the UK overnight programme on BBC One.
BBC Radio Wales will have a special programme on air from 06:00. | Environmental inspectors have been called in after an increase in tritium gas discharges from the former Chapelcross nuclear plant, near Annan.
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General Electric's financing arm - GE Capital- has asked regulators to remove it from the list of institutions deemed "too big to fail" after having shrunk the size of its business.
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These are estimated results times for EU referendum results in Wales for Friday morning. |
Write a summary of this document. | Elmbridge council said the area was placed under 24-hour police guard for five days from when it received the alert to when the hazardous material was safely removed.
The 28 rusting drums were found in a suburban garage in the north of Elmbridge borough, the council said.
They contained a sodium cyanide mixture that can become explosive when wet.
The council, which has just revealed details of the operation, has not said how the drums were discovered or where they were.
The alert came on 22 October, with the drums removed last Sunday and Monday.
Councillor Glenn Dearlove said the removal of the drums, which contained 1.5 tonnes of chemicals, was "a significant task" because of the number of the containers, the nature of the waste and the age of the drums.
He said there was no threat to residents nearby because the chemicals were in a stable environment, but he said it was imperative they were removed quickly and safely.
The landowner was responsible for the removal and disposal of waste and would meet the cost of the operation, he added.
The Aberdeen-born former Manchester United star helped take down the first of hundreds of the signs from public areas.
He said: "You need to get young people out playing - the streets were where we learned our trade."
Aberdeen's plans to become the first city in Scotland to remove all such signs were revealed in August.
A report said the signs were not legally enforceable and were a deterrent to outdoor play.
The footballing great told BBC Scotland: "I think a lot of parents would be quite happy for the kids to be out playing football or whatever they wanted to play.
"A few people might not be too happy but it will be nice for the kids.
"Computer games are not what you require."
He said of his childhood days: "One post was a lamppost, the other was a drainpipe or a jacket.
"There were no signs up to say no ball games.
"It's nice to have this come round, taking the signs down."
Asked if he ever got in trouble, he admitted: "Probably".
The campaign to take down the iconic signs was assisted by local charity Aberdeen Greenspace.
It is hoped the move will help to improve the health, and skills, of the city's children.
To mark the removal of the signs, hundreds of sports balls will be given to underprivileged children.
The council is trying to claw back a £10.25m loan to Northampton Town, made to help the club develop its Sixfields Stadium.
In a statement the council said it had applied to prevent the sale of Christina Cardoza's house.
She is the wife of David Cardoza, a former club chairman and director.
The council said in a statement: "We have taken this action against the Cardozas as part of our pursuit of the £10.25m loan made by Northampton Borough Council to Northampton Town Football Club.
"The borough council took on the right to pursue the debt from the football club under the memorandum of understanding signed with the club's new owners and we have made it clear that we do intend to take the action needed both to find out what happened and to recover the public money that has not been repaid."
A meeting earlier at the District Registry of the High Court in Birmingham adjourned the case until a hearing on 20 May.
Mr Cardoza has yet to comment.
A woman had complained to police that she was sexually assaulted by a man in his 50s in Westminster last May.
The Metropolitan Police said the former Rochdale MP was informed the matter had been dropped on Wednesday.
Mr Danczuk, 50, who is standing for re-election in the town as an independent, said he believed the claim was "politically motivated".
He said the allegation was made to police the day he collected nomination papers from Rochdale Council entitling him to stand in the 8 June election.
He added the first he knew of the "totally false" allegation was when he was asked for a comment by a journalist on 8 May.
The allegation later appeared in newspaper headlines.
Mr Danczuk said the claim was "a desperate attempt to smear and undermine my general election campaign in Rochdale".
The former MP was suspended by the Parliamentary Labour Party in December 2015 amid allegations concerning his conduct.
He later resigned from the party after he was barred from standing for Labour in Rochdale, a seat he had held since winning it from the Liberal Democrats in 2010. | Cyanide drums stored illegally in a garage in Surrey have been removed in an operation lasting two days.
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Scottish football legend Denis Law has kicked off the process of removing 'No ball games' signs in his home city.
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Northampton Borough Council is seeking an interim injunction to stop the sale of a house owned by the wife of the ex-chairman of the town's football club.
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Former Labour MP Simon Danczuk will face no further action following a rape allegation, police have confirmed. |
Summarize the information in the following document. | The baby, named Gito by the team from International Animal Rescue, was so lifeless when found they thought he was dead.
He was being kept as a pet in the village of Merawa, about 100 miles from the charity's centre in Ketapang.
The team said Gito's mother had almost certainly been killed before he was stolen and sold for less than £20.
Kept in a urine-soaked cardboard box and fed entirely on condensed milk, he was severely dehydrated and malnourished.
He was suffering from a lack of hair and grey flaking skin due to sarcoptic mange, a highly contagious skin disease.
The charity's Alan Knight said forest fires devastating Indonesia were leaving wild orangutans without food or shelter.
"Those that escape being burnt alive are left exposed, under threat of starving or being killed or captured by humans.
"It's hard to stomach the shocking state Gito was in. He is in safe hands now but tragically there are many more like him in desperate need of our help," he said.
In an interview with Al Jazeera TV, Maj-Gen Yoav Mordechai accused members of Hamas's military wing of training IS fighters and treating those wounded in clashes with the Egyptian military.
The interview came shortly after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned of IS "terrorism knocking at our borders".
Yisrael Hayom provides its usual strong support for Mr Netanyahu, and reports the immediate tightening of security in southern Israel as part of "raising preparedness" for any eventuality.
It is joined by Alex Fishman in Yediot Aharonot, where he writes that Israel cannot allow Sinai to become a "logistics rear for Hamas in Gaza, the fruit of this co-operation with Islamic State".
He adds that it would be "naive" to imagine that IS fighters are not already present in Israel's southern Negev desert, and recruiting among Israel's Arab population.
Other papers like the Jerusalem Post leave to one side the question of Hamas involvement, but have no doubt that Israel, Egypt and Gulf Arab states face a common threat in Islamic State. "It is time to confront this ideology throughout the region, beginning in Sinai," it says in an editorial.
The liberal broadsheet Haaretz questions both Mr Netanyahu's political agenda and the government's intentions in going on the record over its accusations against Hamas.
Commentator Amos Harel says Gen Mordechai's interview could only have come on "explicit orders from the highest levels of the government".
He thinks Israel's aim is to get Egypt to "take direct action" against Hamas - a "highly unusual move" that risks sending out mixed signals, given Israel's own restrained response to recent rocket attacks by possible Islamic State sympathisers in Gaza.
Haaretz's editorial concedes that there may be co-operation with IS, but cautions against using this as a pretext to "settle scores" with Hamas given the "regional chaos".
Whatever the truth of tactical co-operation in Sinai, IS has a history of denouncing Hamas and other Muslim Brotherhood groups as "apostates" over their willingness to contest elections and tolerate non-Sunni Muslims.
IS recently released a video threatening to overthrow Hamas, with Palestinian fighters in Syria condemning the movement's crackdown on Salafist groups in Gaza and its approach to enforcing Islamic law.
Some prominent commentators on jihadist sites even speculate that Islamic State is in fact planning to attack Hamas via Sinai as part of the current campaign, or by activating fighters in Gaza itself.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
He was refused bail at Camberwell Magistrates Court and will appear before a judge again next month.
He is accused of attempted murder, grievous bodily harm and possession of a bladed article.
The two victims, both 15, are being treated in hospital. One remains in a critical condition.
The attack happened at Kingsdale Foundation School in south London on Thursday shortly before 15.30 GMT, and pupils were kept inside buildings as emergency services dealt with the situation.
The school reopened on Friday. | A UK charity has released pictures of a baby orangutan it rescued in West Borneo and nursed back to health.
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An Israeli general's assertion that he has intelligence linking the militant Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which dominates Gaza, with Islamic State's affiliate in Egypt's Sinai peninsula is a major talking point in the Israeli media.
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A 15-year-old boy has been remanded in youth detention after being charged over the stabbing of two pupils at a school in Dulwich. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | The body of Jordan Kane Woonton, from Nottinghamshire, was found at the residential Pentwyn School at Clyro near Hay-on-Wye in June 2012.
The school was closed in December 2012 by Hampshire-based owners, Hillcrest.
The Cardiff hearing was told that next autumn's inquest will last two weeks.
The school cared for boys with social, emotional and behavioural difficulties and accepted children from across the UK.
Hillcrest was fined £2,400 in 2014 after being prosecuted by the Care and Social Services Inspectorate Wales in relation to the teenager's death.
The company admitted employing insufficient experienced staff and not checking their fitness to work there.
Assistant Coroner for Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan Chris Woolley said he had agreed to hold the inquest in front of a jury after considering the "youth and vulnerability" of Jordan Woonton, and the fact that the conditions in which Jordan were held were akin to secure accommodation.
He said the teenager's family had a "reasonable expectation a jury will be called" and that their expectation should "not be disturbed without good reason".
The inquest is expected to take place from September onwards next year, said Mr Wooley. | A jury inquest into the death of a 15-year-old boy at a privately-run school in Powys will focus on his care plans, staff training and the suitability of the school, a hearing has been told. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | St Mary's Parish Church, in Ilkeston, Derbyshire, raised £30,000 to carry out repairs to eight 105-year-old bells.
Work included refurbishing the frame and fitting and rehanging the bells.
Dave Bamford, from Taylor's Bell Foundry in Leicestershire, who helped restore and reinstall them, said help from local offenders on community service was "absolutely incredible".
The original bells, from 1732, were recast and added to the church in 1910.
Mr Bamford said the offenders carried out much of the heavy-lifting and the "lightest is over half a tonne".
"You've got to get the bells out of the mechanisms and get the mechanisms down all the steps to the bottom," he said.
"Without them [the offenders] we would probably still be working on it to this day."
Erewash Borough Council and the community donated money towards the restoration work.
Councillor Chris Corbett, leader of the authority, said: "This council values the history and heritage of our borough and is committed to protecting it - so keeping the church bells ringing, an age-old tradition in this country, is very important to us."
These "facilitating" subjects are: mathematics and further mathematics, English (literature), physics, biology, chemistry, geography, history and languages (classical and modern).
Schools are ranked on the percentage of A-level pupils achieving this and then on the percentage of students completing sixth form studies.
Schools marked IND are independent, those marked SEL select their pupils on the basis of academic activity. Schools marked AC are academies. Schools with fewer than 10 pupils are not included.
The 22-year-old has made 56 appearances for Hibs since his debut in February 2012, all but three of them starts.
He has played just once this season, in the Scottish League Cup in July, having been hampered by a hamstring injury.
Having come up through Celtic's youth academy, Forster has also had loan spells at Berwick Rangers and East Fife, but never played in England.
He could be eligible for Tuesday's game with Northampton Town in League Two if Argyle receive international clearance in time.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Seam bowler Hepburn was one of three 19-year-olds in the home side.
They had Leicestershire 98-8 before Clint McKay (42 not out) and 18-year-old Zak Chappell (31) put on 74.
They were eventually all out for 172 and Worcestershire eased to 176-2, with Tom Fell (60no) and Joe Clarke (51no) sharing an unbroken stand of 98.
It was a dismal batting performance by Leicestershire's top order before McKay and debutant Chappell came together in the 29th over, with spinner Saeed Ajmal (3-33) providing the main support for Hepburn.
The result was never in doubt after Tom Kohler-Cadmore (31) and Daryl Mitchell (22) launched the reply with a stand of 56, and Fell sealed the win with a boundary off Rob Sayer with 18 overs to spare.
Leicestershire have only one group game left, against Somerset on Tuesday, to register their first win of the competition, while Worcestershire, who had lost their five previous matches, complete their involvement away at Derbyshire. | Church bells over a century old have been restored to their former glory after a five-year appeal.
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This table lists the 227 schools in England where 25% or more of pupils doing A-levels got at least grades AAB in subjects leading universities say they want.
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Plymouth Argyle have signed Hibernian defender Jordon Forster on loan until the end of the season.
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Alex Hepburn marked his debut with 4-34 as Worcestershire finally broke their One-Day Cup duck with an eight-wicket win over Leicestershire at New Road. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | The pet, named Jack, was brought into Maria's Animal Shelter in Probus, Truro, and left Sandra Taylor needing stitches in her hand at hospital.
He was also biting members of staff and running after them if they interfered with his cage.
He is now with a foster carer where he is being encouraged to "have a more positive attitude to humans".
1 Space and exercise - the minimum acceptable size of a hutch according to the Rabbit Welfare Association and Fund is 6ft x 2ft x 2ft with an attached exercise area of 8ft x 4ft by 2ft high
2 Areas to hide and retreat - often their hutch
3 Proper diet - unlimited hay and grass
4 Free from fear - due to their keen senses rabbits can quickly make fearful associations
Jack started showing his wayward side about three weeks ago.
Maria Mulkeen, who owns the refuge at Probus, said: "He started nipping people and got worse.
"I was outside feeding other rabbits when I heard screaming and a volunteer was being chase around and being bitten by Jack.
"I have never seen a rabbit do that before - he was like a psychopath. Even if we were cleaning out his hutch he would come over and attack you."
She asked Cornwall animal behaviourist Carol Valvona for advice and she recommended one-to-one care.
Jack is now staying with foster carer Sandra McIlduff from Tresillian.
Ms McIlduff said: "He is getting better. I have picked up on what stresses him out. If you move too quickly around him he doesn't like it he thinks you are going to grab him.
"He's actually a big softy if you get down to his level."
Ms Valvona said: "The most important difference between the rabbit, and dogs and cats, is it is a prey animal.
"If your whole life revolves around avoiding becoming someone else's lunch, you will be on the alert and easily scared." | A violent lop-eared rabbit is being treated for aggressive behaviour after biting staff at an animal refuge. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Its stock jumped by 70%, boosting its market value from £13bn to £19.6bn.
Shares surpassed a near-35% rise in August 1989 when the Japanese company launched Dragon Quest, a fantasy role-playing game, in the US.
Pokemon Go, a virtual reality treasure hunt where players hunt monsters that appear on their smartphones, leads the free-to-download app chart.
It was made available in the UK this week following its launch in the US, Australia and New Zealand.
It was developed by the Pokemon Company, which is 32% owned by Nintendo, and Niantic, which was spun out of Google last year when the search engine giant announced it was setting up Alphabet as its new parent company.
Since then, the Pokémon Company, Google and Nintendo have invested up to $30m in Niantic to develop Pokemon Go.
However, the success of Pokemon Go has not been without controversy.
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington asked people not to play Pokemon Go on their phones during their visit, branding it "extremely inappropriate".
The nearby Arlington National Cemetery also warned off Pokemon players. A spokesman said they had not experienced any problems yet, but wanted to pre-empt any issues.
"Playing games such as Pokemon Go on these hallowed grounds would not be deemed appropriate," cemetery officials said in a statement.
Both locations feature in the new smartphone game.
Gareth Browning, 33, was on foot in Whitley on Saturday evening, when he was hit by a black Mazda Aerosport.
He remains in a critical but stable condition in hospital. His colleague was unharmed.
Luke Haywood, of Chagford Road, Whitley, was charged with causing grievous bodily harm, dangerous driving and vehicle theft.
He appeared at Reading Magistrates' Court earlier and was remanded in custody to appear at Reading Crown Court on 16 December.
A 31-year-old woman has been bailed until January.
Earlier on Tuesday police carried out a reconstruction of the incident at Lower Earley Way as part of their investigations.
Andrew Maling, 47, from Sigglesthorne, near Hull, was jailed for 10 years for the manslaughter of Amy Gough in June.
Miss Gough, 34, from Sandiacre, Derbyshire, died several days after suffering stomach injuries inflicted by Maling in March 2015.
The Appeal Court said his history of domestic violence should be reflected.
More on this story and other news in Derbyshire
Maling, who watched the court hearing via video-link from prison, had inflicted serious injuries to Miss Gough "over a period of several years".
Last year, Miss Gough suffered serious abdominal injuries, which had been caused by "blunt force trauma".
Her heart failed and she died in hospital on 29 March 2015, several days after the attack.
At trial at Nottingham Crown Court, Maling had denied guilt, insisting Miss Gough's injuries resulted from an "accidental drunken fall".
Lawyers for the Attorney General argued there was "no mitigation whatever" for his crime.
Lady Justice Hallett, sitting with Mr Justice King and Mr Justice Dove, said she had no doubt the original 10-year sentence was "too short".
"If a killing results from a campaign of domestic violence, that is a serious aggravating factor which must be properly reflected in the sentence imposed," Justice Hallett said.
The impact of Miss Gough's death had been devastating for her family, the court heard.
Her mother, Christine, had spoken of the void left by her daughter's loss - describing her as a "caring, beautiful and warm person".
Speaking after the hearing, the Attorney General said: "This was a one of many violent attacks the offender inflicted on the deceased over a number of years, and this attack lasted several days.
"I hope this increased sentence gives some comfort to the Ms Gough's family at this difficult time." | Nintendo has enjoyed its biggest weekly share price gain in more than 30 years following the launch of Pokemon Go.
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A man has been charged in connection with a crash in Reading that left a police officer critically injured.
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A violent boyfriend whose abuse caused the death of his girlfriend has had his "unduly lenient" prison sentence extended by a third to 15 years. |
What is the summary of the given information? | St Hilary resident Monica Dennis took to Twitter to post pictures of the lorry.
She tweeted: "So much for sat nav. Tanker currently stuck in lane by Manor Cottage, St Hilary."
Around 1,500 troops have converged at nearby St Athan in what is believed to be one of the largest military exercises held in Wales.
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9 May 2015 Last updated at 14:19 BST
They have won more than half of the seats in parliament, with some votes still being counted.
All attention is now on Downing Street where David Cameron will now live for the next five years, along with Larry the act too!
Ricky has been there finding out how big the news is for people around the world.
Blatter announced on 2 June that he would step down at an extraordinary congress between December and March.
However, on Thursday the 79-year-old said he had not resigned and was thought to be considering re-election.
"The times of flirting with the power are definitely gone," said Domenico Scala, the independent chairman of Fifa's audit and compliance committee.
"I call on all concerned - including Mr Blatter - to endorse in the interest of the reforms unequivocally the announced changing of the guard at the top of Fifa."
Two criminal investigations into alleged Fifa corruption began in the week that Blatter was elected for a fifth term, with seven Fifa officials arrested on charges of receiving bribes.
Four days after his re-election, Blatter - who is reportedly under investigation in the United States - said: "While I have a mandate from the membership of Fifa, I do not feel that I have a mandate from the entire world of football.
"Therefore, I have decided to lay down my mandate at an extraordinary elective congress. I will continue to exercise my functions as Fifa president until that election."
However, Blatter did not use the words 'resign' or 'resignation'. He did add, however, that the election would be for his "successor" and said: "I shall not be a candidate."
Trevor Wright, 67, of Ballingdon Street, Sudbury, Suffolk, was found guilty at Ipswich Crown Court of five charges of rape and seven of sexual assault.
He had already admitted six more sex assaults on the same three victims.
Judge Martyn Levett told Wright he should sign the sex offenders' register indefinitely.
Wright's offending took place between 1977 and 1989, one rape occurred in a car belonging to a customer at his garage in Ballingdon Street.
Other offences took place at a stables where Wright kept a horse.
Giving evidence, Wright said he was "sex obsessed" and admitted rubbing himself against the girls for sexual gratification but denied committing any sexual assaults or rapes.
He told police he had been a heavy drinker and suffered from memory problems. | A large army vehicle blocked a road in a village in the Vale of Glamorgan for more than three hours on Friday.
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David Cameron's party, the Conservatives, have won the general election meaning he will stay as Prime Minister.
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Sepp Blatter has been urged to stick by his decision to quit as president of world football's governing body, Fifa.
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A "sex obsessed" garage owner who preyed on schoolgirls in the 1970s and 80s has been jailed for 19 years. |
Summarize the following piece. | Kelly Webster and Lauren Thornton of Leyland, Lancashire, were killed by generator fumes on a boat in 2013.
The Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) called for new vessels to be fitted with carbon monoxide alarms.
But the Lake District National Park Authority (LDNPA) has voted unanimously to not implement the scheme.
Ms Webster's partner Matthew Eteson, 42, had modified the boat's system to make it quieter but a makeshift exhaust failed, allowing lethal gases to build up.
He was handed a two-year suspended jail sentence after being found guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence.
The MAIB urged the government to bring in rules that would mean all new recreational craft would have to be fitted with carbon monoxide alarms.
However, LDNPA members said the scheme was "not an effective comprehensive method of addressing the important issue of boat safety" and voted against it at a meeting on Wednesday.
Head of park management Mark Eccles, said the authority is introducing compulsory public liability insurance which it hopes will drive up the "quality and maintenance" of boats.
He said: "The most important thing for us is the promotion and awareness of carbon monoxide poisoning. What we really want to do is make sure we're out and about with people - a proactive campaign."
The authority said the compulsory insurance applies to Coniston and Ullswater moorings and does not include Windermere as it is managed by South Lakeland District Council and private moorings. | Lake District bosses will not adopt a boat safety scheme recommended by a marine watchdog following the deaths of a mother and daughter on Windermere. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Number 1 Capital Quarter was built as a speculative development and purchased in 2013 to stimulate development in the city's enterprise zone.
The building, which is now fully occupied, has been bought by Global Gate Capital as an investment.
Economy Secretary Ken Skates said the Welsh Government "acted as a catalyst and inspired confidence in the market".
Ministers said they bought the building from its developers to ensure it was completed, providing Grade A office space to attract new investment and jobs.
"The provision of office accommodation of the highest quality has contributed to the success of Central Cardiff Enterprise Zone, enabled existing businesses in the financial and professional services sector to expand and attracted new inward investment," Mr Skates said.
Network Rail and the Welsh Government's own Finance Wales arm are among the organisations based at the premises.
The Welsh Government's purchase of land and buildings for development has faced criticism from opposition parties.
In September, Plaid Cymru AM Neil McEvoy said it was "staggering" that three shops in Pontypridd bought in 2008 for £1.25m as part of regeneration plans were sold in 2016 for £271,000 after plans for a new shopping centre failed to come to fruition. | An office block in central Cardiff bought by the Welsh Government for £14m has been sold for just under £20m. |
Summarize this article briefly. | Online data specialist PCA Predict said e-commerce activity surged north of the border, particularly in the Glasgow and Edinburgh areas.
Many Scottish stores had opened their doors early on Black Friday in order to draw in bargain hunters.
But reports indicated that fewer people turned up than expected.
Black Friday is a US tradition in which goods are discounted following the Thanksgiving holiday.
It has become increasingly popular in the UK.
PCA Predict chief technical officer Jamie Turner said: "In Scotland there has been up to four times as much (e-commerce) traffic as we would normally see, so the Scots are really keen for a bargain."
Mr Turner added that at one point, Scottish towns and cities accounted for the top ten spending hotspots in the UK.
On the high streets, patient customers and minimal queuing contrasted with scenes of chaos seen in some Scottish shops on the same day last year.
About 60 bargain hunters, some in pyjamas and dressing gowns, queued for more than an hour at Tesco Extra in Silverburn, Glasgow, which had closed between midnight and 05:00 in preparation for Black Friday.
Staff gave out tickets on arrival and only allowed 10 people in at a time to avoid any disturbances.
In 2014 hundreds of shoppers descended on the same store, which had to be closed amid chaotic scenes.
Glasgow shopping centre Intu Braehead reported "plenty of customers coming out in the wee small hours", after its Game store opened at midnight.
By mid-afternoon, there had been no reports of disturbances at any major Scottish stores.
Police Scotland had issued a warning to shoppers about anti-social behaviour, after minor incidents of disorder were reported in some stores during last year's sales.
In a statement, police said: "By all means grab a bargain, just don't grab each other."
Representatives of Scotland's retailers had said appropriate security measures would be put in place to ensure the safety and security of staff and customers. | There was little sign of a Black Friday shopping frenzy on the high streets after Scots appeared to turn to the internet for bargains. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | The Chinese economy expanded by 6.7% in the first three months of the year, the slowest quarterly growth in seven years.
Chinese markets edged lower, with the Shanghai composite down by 0.26% to 3,074.26.
In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng index was also lower by 0.16% at midday to 21,304.21.
In South Korea the Kospi index there was down 0.1% at midday to 2,014.55.
Over in Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 index edged down 0.34% - or 56.68 points - to 16,854.37 at the lunch break. Investors stayed at the sidelines, waiting for full assessment and impact of a 6.5 magnitude earthquake in southern Japan.
Australia was the only market in the plus column on Friday. The benchmark S&P ASX 200 was up 0.4% at midday, to 5,144.1.
US stocks had closed mostly unchanged on Thursday.
US banks reported lower profits, but beat analysts earnings estimates. Bank of America and Wells Fargo both reported a fall in first-quarter profit after they put aside more cash to cover bad loans to energy firms. | Asian markets are mixed in Friday's session, with a lot of focus on data from China. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | All of the band were safe following the attack, but members of the crew and friends were among the victims.
Frontman Jesse Hughes told Vice people who hid in their dressing room had all been killed "except for a kid who was hiding under my leather jacket".
A total of 130 were killed during the Paris terror attacks on 13 November.
In a preview from the forthcoming Vice.com interview, Hughes said: "Several people hid in our dressing room and the killers were able to get in and killed every one of them, except for a kid who was hiding under my leather jacket.
"People were playing dead and they were so scared - a great reason so many were killed was because so many people wouldn't leave their friends. So many people put themselves in front of people."
Among the victims were their merchandise manager, 36-year-old Briton Nick Alexander, and colleagues from their record label - Thomas Ayad, Marie Mosser, and Manu Perez.
Following the attacks, the band issued a statement, saying: "Although bonded in grief with the victims, the fans, the families, the citizens of Paris, and all those affected by terrorism, we are proud to stand together, with our new family, now united by a common goal of love and compassion."
Eagles of Death Metal have put all their concerts on hold, and have pulled a documentary due to screen at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam.
Screenings have been cancelled of The Redemption Of The Devil, which follows Jesse Hughes in the build-up to the release of their new album, because of concerns the timing was inappropriate. | Eagles of Death Metal, the US rock band whose fans were targeted in the Paris attacks, have spoken about the tragedy that saw 89 people killed at their gig. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Yorkshire's Ballance scored 24 runs in four innings as England drew last month's Test series in Bangladesh 1-1.
The 26-year-old scored 590 runs in his first 10 Test innings but averages 18 in his last eight.
Vaughan said: "He's not looking like anything the player he was when he first came into international cricket."
Zimbabwe-born Ballance replaced Jonathan Trott in England's batting order after the Warwickshire right-hander retired from international cricket.
New Zealand and Australia exposed the Yorkshire batsman's technique last year and he was dropped for the third Ashes Test.
Vaughan, who captained England in 51 of his 82 Tests between 1999 and 2008, told BBC Radio 5 live that Kent's Sam Billings should replace Ballance for the first of five Tests against India, which starts on 9 November.
"He looks shot for gameplan," added Vaughan.
"He's had his technique questioned. As soon as the ball swings or spins his technique doesn't look like it's going to give him any whereabouts of how to survive long enough.
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"That's my real concern in this England side - they've only got Jos Buttler to replace Gary Ballance in the middle of the innings.
"If I was England, I'd be getting another right hander sent out to India as soon as possible. I'd go for Sam Billings.
"If you speak to former England batsman Graham Thorpe, he says Sam Billings is the best player of spin.
"I don't think it's being negative, it's just being sensible. You realise you need more right-handers, you need more competition in that middle of the innings.
"They've left themselves short of options in that middle order."
Vaughan said the only way England could compete with India, the world's top-ranked side, was to "park the bus".
"They haven't got enough expertise or wow factor with the ball to be able to blow India away. They have to try and stay in the game," he said.
"If they try and play this expansive way India will just laugh and have them on toast and it will be a 5-0 whitewash. No question about it.
"If you want to call it negative cricket, play negative cricket. The only way they can compete is to try and frustrate them and try to force the error."
England head coach Trevor Bayliss said England had no plans to schedule any warm-up matches between now and the end of the series with India.
Following the five Tests, England play three one-day internationals and three Twenty20 matches, with the final one on 1 February.
"We don't want to get to the third or fourth Test in India and everyone's shot mentally and physically," he said.
"I think if the players take the right messages and learn the right things from these two matches, that will stand us in good stead heading forward, which we know is going to be an even more difficult assignment in India."
The former England and Sunderland star admitted grooming and sexual activity with a girl aged 15 and was convicted of a charge of sexual touching.
Following the trial at Bradford Crown Court the 28-year-old was released on bail to set his affairs in order.
The judge warned him he faced jail and said "say goodbye to your daughter".
Johnson met up with the girl on 30 January 2015 after agreeing to sign football shirts for her, the court heard.
The player admitted kissing the teenager but told the jury the encounter in his Range Rover "went no further".
The jury found Johnson, who also played for Middlesbrough and Manchester City, guilty last week of sexual touching but cleared him of a charge relating to another sexual act.
He had already been sacked by Sunderland after admitting on the first day of his trial that he had kissed the girl. | England cannot pick "shot for confidence" Gary Ballance for the forthcoming Tests against India, says former England captain Michael Vaughan.
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Sex case footballer Adam Johnson, who was warned by a judge to expect a "significant jail term", is set to be sentenced on 24 March. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | It's following the online backlash he received from his first video, in which he appeared to pinch unsuspecting women's bottoms.
He then released a second video where a woman did the same to men, which was taken down shortly afterwards.
On Tuesday, he posted The Reveal where he explained that he wanted to highlight "sexual abuse against men".
The 25-year old said the video was "staged and scripted".
"It goes without saying you can't go round touching people's bums without asking," he said.
He said he wanted to showcase a violent relationship a male friend of his had suffered.
"I chose to use sexual harassment as the focal point of the experiment," he said.
"That way I could pass it off as prank, pretend it's harmless and watch all you guys go crazy in the comments.
"I just wanted to show, in many cases people would be outraged by an act like this on a woman but then laugh it off when it's a man."
But that didn't go down well with many people on Twitter.
"I just wanted to shine a light onto an otherwise dark corner; abuse on men," said Sam.
Some on Twitter have stuck up for the ex-Big Brother star though.
Mazzi Maz, who collaborated on YouTube with Sam, told Newsbeat his friend had gone "too far" after watching the first video.
The 20-year-old said he didn't know Sam was going to be publishing the video.
"There are things you just don't do. YouTube is a place where you can get ripped to shreds."
Maz said the two of them loved making videos together.
"We are meant to push the boundaries but you need to know what's right and what's wrong.
"A sexual predator isn't a good look."
Newsbeat has contacted Sam Pepper to get a response on the backlash from his latest video, but has not yet had a reply.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube | YouTube star Sam Pepper has released a video statement to say his bum-pinching video was a "social experiment". |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The council is to cut £42m from adult services and £16m from children's services under its budget proposals.
A "significant number" of day centres and children's centres would close, as well as at least two leisure centres and up to half the libraries.
Funding for school crossing patrols will also be cut under the plans.
The council's chief executive Ged Fitzgerald said he was hoping community groups and other organisations would run some services affected by the cuts.
The authority said it was going to "work with schools" to see if they could fund lollipop patrols when funding is withdrawn.
Investments at some pelican crossings will also be pulled if the plans are approved.
Park Road Leisure Centre in Dingle and Everton Park Leisure Centre are earmarked for closure within the next three years as part of £4m cuts to the council's Lifestyles Centres budget.
By Claire HamiltonPolitical Reporter, BBC Radio Merseyside
This latest round of cuts will affect the lives of the very old and the very young in Liverpool and plenty in between.
Two leisure centres (including Park Road in Dingle where Olympian Beth Tweddle trains) will definitely close.
Some adult day care centres will shut. Sure Start centres - which were reorganised a couple of years ago - will be under the spotlight again and many of those could close.
Half the city's libraries (again, heavily used by the elderly and the pre-schoolers) will close unless community groups come forward to run them.
Perhaps a few will - but in reality it is a mammoth task to run a library, and neighbouring authorities are struggling to find qualified volunteers to operate theirs.
Mayor Anderson is certain the city council will still exist in five years time, but based on these forecasts, its role will be very different.
The council will cut a further £500,000 from its annual spending on library services, in addition to a £1m annual saving agreed last year.
This could result in the closure of up to half the city's 19 libraries.
Mayor of Liverpool and city council leader Joe Anderson said the council had to make "some really tough decisions".
"Many of the proposals will result in some significant changes to services that people hold dear, but we need to start making those decisions now as the money simply isn't there to fund them in the future," he said.
"Every service will be impacted in some way by these savings and several hundred people employed by the council will face the prospect of losing their jobs."
He said the plans "protect the most vulnerable adults and children in our communities".
The latest budget cuts follows central government funding cuts of £173m over the last three years.
Cafodd hysbyseb ei chyhoeddi yn gwahodd pobl i fod yn rhan o Gyngor Partneriaeth y Gymraeg yr wythnos diwethaf.
Ond dywedodd AC Arfon, Siân Gwenllïan, bod yr hysbyseb yn "annerbyniol", gan ddweud bod angen i'r "mwyafrif" o aelodau'r panel fod yn gallu siarad Cymraeg.
Mewn llythyr at yr AC Plaid Cymru, fe wnaeth Gweinidog y Gymraeg, Alun Davies ymddiheuro am y camgymeriad.
Dywedodd nad "y bwriad" oedd bod un siaradwr Cymraeg ar y panel, ac ychwanegodd y byddai medru'r Gymraeg yn sgil hanfodol i saith aelod o'r panel, ac yn ddymunol i'r aelod arall.
Mae'r hysbyseb yn cael ei hail ysgrifennu. | More than 300 jobs are to go at Liverpool City Council as it seeks to make £156m of savings over the next three years, it has announced.
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Mae Llywodraeth Cymru wedi dweud mai camgymeriad oedd cyhoeddi hysbyseb yn datgan mai dim ond un o wyth aelod o banel cynghori ar y Gymraeg ddylai orfod siarad yr iaith. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | David Lee Stewart, 31, of Gray's Park Avenue, Belfast, was jailed on Wednesday.
He was sentenced to three and a half years in prison and another three and a half years on licence.
The PPS has now confirmed it received a complaint about the ruling.
A PPS spokesperson said: "We have received correspondence outlining concerns over the sentences passed in this case.
"The matters raised will be examined carefully in line with our protocols around unduly lenient sentences in the Crown Court."
Enda, from County Tyrone, was walking to his student accommodation when a van mounted a footpath and hit him in October 2014.
He sustained a broken neck and head injuries.
During his trial, the court heard that Stewart took 13 drinks, including six pints of beer and four Jagerbombs, a mix of a spirit and an energy drink, before driving his van.
Traces of drugs, including cocaine, were also found in his system.
Speaking outside Belfast Crown Court on Wednesday, Enda's father Peter Dolan said the family was "disappointed and disgusted" at the length of sentence handed down.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the attorney general John Larkin said he had stated previously that he "should be able to refer unduly lenient sentences to the Court of Appeal".
"At present he [Mr Larkin] does not have these responsibilities and he can only, as a member of the public, lament the death of Enda Dolan, a young man of so much talent and promise," the spokesperson added. | The Public Prosecution Service (PPS) has received a complaint about the sentencing of the drunk driver who killed 18-year-old Enda Dolan. |
Summarize the information given below. | Manchester United, Chelsea and Manchester City, who between them won the previous 11 titles before Leicester's triumph last season, have provided a large proportion of England's squads at major tournaments in recent years.
United, Chelsea and City players occupied 12 of the 23 places in England's squad for Euro 2012.
However, the percentage of minutes played by Englishmen for those clubs in the Premier League has fallen every season since.
From 30 players accounting for 37% of playing time in 2011-12, 21 players accounted for 25% two years later.
The number of players has remained consistent from 2014 onwards, but their time on the pitch has continued to fall - 22 Englishmen for United, Chelsea and City made up 20% of minutes played last season.
Only six players from United, Chelsea and City featured in England's squad at Euro 2016.
Although the 2016-17 season is only two games old, City, United and Chelsea feature in the bottom five Premier League teams in terms of the playing time for England-qualified players.
They have used a combined eight English players this term, which translates to 19.6% of playing time for City, 18.2% for Chelsea and 18.1% for United.
Joe Hart, England's first-choice goalkeeper at Euro 2016, is yet to feature in the league for Manchester City this season.
United striker Marcus Rashford, another member of Roy Hodgson's squad in France, has not played a league game, while team-mate Chris Smalling has managed only one minute of action.
It is possible that all three may feature this weekend, before Allardyce announces his England squad for the 2018 World Cup qualifier in Slovakia on 4 September.
A total of 104 England-qualified players have appeared in the Premier League this season, although that includes Liverpool's James Milner and Chelsea's John Terry, both of whom have retired from international football.
The only two clubs with worse percentages than United, Chelsea and City this season are Stoke and Watford, with 9% and 10% of playing time respectively.
Ryan Shawcross is the only Englishman to feature for Stoke, while Watford's only England-qualified players have been Troy Deeney and Ben Watson, who was sent off 12 minutes after coming on as a substitute against Southampton.
At the other end of the scale, Bournemouth manager Eddie Howe has used the most English players - 11 in the opening two games, accounting for 67% of playing time.
However, none of those players has a senior international cap between them.
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. | As Sam Allardyce prepares to name his first England squad on Sunday, statistics show English players at the three Premier League title favourites are spending less time on the pitch - and that trend looks like continuing this season. |
Write a summary of this document. | Lewandowski's deflected shot wrong-footed Ron-Robert Zieler for the opener before Mario Gotze chipped home the second, and whipped in the third.
Artur Sobiech scored Hannover's consolation at the Allianz Arena.
Bayern finish the season 10 points clear of Borussia Dortmund in second.
Bayern's French winger Kingsley Coman hit the post with a header, while Iver Fossum, Waldemar Anton and Edgar Prib missed good chances for Hannover.
Before the game, there was a presentation to Bayern boss Guardiola, who takes over at Manchester City next season.
His final Bayern game will be the German Cup final against Dortmund next Saturday (19:00 BST) as he aims for a second domestic double in three seasons. | Robert Lewandowski became the first man for 39 years to score 30 Bundesliga goals in a season as champions Bayern Munich beat Hannover in Pep Guardiola's final league game in charge. |
Can you summarize this passage? | The Welsh Government has faced criticism that it is lagging behind after the UK government announced it would ban the fees.
UKIP held a debate on the issue on Wednesday, where Plaid Cymru and the Conservatives also called for the fees to be abolished.
The Welsh Government said it was considering evidence.
A proposal from ministers for a consultation with other assembly parties looks likely to get more support.
Plaid Cymru has criticised Labour for not banning the fees at an earlier opportunity. First Minister Carwyn Jones said he was actively considering banning them.
Labour AM Jenny Rathbone, who also spoke in the debate, has previously said she would consider a private members bill to abolish the fees if the government does not act.
Gareth Bennett, UKIP AM for South Wales Central who led a debate on the issue in the Senedd on Wednesday, said: "It's absolutely unacceptable that Wales lags behind the rest of the United Kingdom when it comes to these huge fees.
"The Welsh Government need to take urgent steps to protect tenants and make it easier for people to rent their own home."
Plaid Cymru's Sian Gwenllian said: "We have always argued that these are punitive charges which should be scrapped at the earliest opportunity.
"Unfortunately, our efforts to do this with an amendment to the Renting Homes Bill last year was scuppered by Labour."
Ms Gwenllian told Wednesday's debate that the only party that had not committed to abolishing fees was Labour.
David Melding, for the Conservatives, said the fees should be abolished.
But Carl Sargeant, the communities secretary who is responsible for housing, said evidence was now emerging from the application of the ban in Scotland.
"We need to look very carefully at the evidence presented," he said, saying that although research from Shelter showed little impact, anecdotal evidence had suggested rent had gone up and that there were agents still charging tenants.
UKIP's motion in the debate called on the Welsh Government to bring forward legislation in this assembly term to ban renters' fees, ensuring costs cannot be passed on to tenants or private landlords.
However this was unsuccessful. Instead UKIP joined Plaid Cymru, the Conservatives and the governing Labour group to pass a motion backing government calls to consult on a way forward, and consider how legislation might work in light of the evidence from Scotland.
A Welsh Government spokeswoman earlier said: "As the recent introduction of Rent Smart Wales demonstrates, the Welsh Government is committed to getting a fair deal for tenants.
"We have already said we are actively considering the evidence from Scotland following the ban there and we will be looking very closely at the proposals in England.
"We do not believe the proposed amendment last year was based on evidence or consultation and it contained no mechanism for enforcing the ban." | Calls to ban tenancy fees by letting agents in Wales have been made in the Senedd by opposition AMs. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Chris Martin's two first-half strikes - a 20-yard curler and a powerful header - came either side of Benik Afobe's well-struck reply for Wolves.
Martin then had a penalty saved by Emiliano Martinez but Bradley Johnson's soft strike made it 3-1 at the break.
Jonhny Russell struck a fourth before Adam Le Fondre made it 4-2.
Le Fondre's looping volley, from substitute Sheyi Ojo's knockdown, sneaked in despite home keeper Scott Carson getting his fingertips to it.
It made up for the penalty shout Wolves did not get before the break when his goalbound shot was blocked by former Wolves defender Jason Shackell's elbow.
Added to that, the home side's second goal could have been ruled out as Martin levered himself into the air off Kortney Hause's shoulders.
And Johnson knew little about the third goal, which hit his outstretched left boot after Wolves failed to clear the Russell corner which resulted from Martinez saving Martin's penalty, awarded for Danny Batth's foul on Tom Ince.
Kenny Jackett's men did come up with a well-worked training ground move for their first goal when Afobe lashed in James Henry's corner to cancel out Martin's early strike.
Media playback is not supported on this device
But the visitors were generally second best, no more so than when sustained Derby pressure resulted in Russell toe poking in from 12 yards for the Rams' fourth.
Le Fondre's goal gave the scoreline a fairer reflection but few would argue that Derby deserved all three points as they stretched their current run to 16 points out of a possible 18 to climb to sixth.
Wolves, who had won both their previous two games 3-0 prior to the international break, have dropped a place to 11th this weekend, now five points adrift of the play-off places.
Derby head coach Paul Clement told BBC Sport:
"Our best performance of the season. We've had some good first halves and some good second halves, but this time we were solid throughout and were deserved victors.
"Chris Martin put in the best performance I've seen from a Championship centre forward from the games I've seen this season. A great finish for the first, a brave header for the second and he led the line well.
"It was a shame he didn't finish off the penalty for what would have been a first-half hat-trick. But he was a well-deserved man of the match.
"Against a good side, it was also a great response from the team to come back and score the way we did following the penalty miss. We could have gone in at half-time on a low. But to make it 3-1 was a big moment."
Wolves head coach Kenny Jackett told BBC Sport:
"Derby were strong and take some stopping, but our defending was poor. We didn't work hard enough to put in enough blocks and cut down things at source.
"There were too many key moments when we didn't defend well enough. They had too many shots and far too many of them we gifted them.
"Their penalty was the right decision. I also thought we should have had one for the handball, but it would be hard to get those sort of decisions here.
"Our keeper's held his hand up for the second goal. He should have left it to Kortney Hause to deal with, but he's a good keeper and he'll learn from that."
Match ends, Derby County 4, Wolverhampton Wanderers 2.
Second Half ends, Derby County 4, Wolverhampton Wanderers 2.
Foul by Richard Keogh (Derby County).
Conor Coady (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Corner, Derby County. Conceded by Dominic Iorfa.
Richard Keogh (Derby County) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Benik Afobe (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Substitution, Derby County. Darren Bent replaces Chris Martin.
Attempt missed. James Henry (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right from a direct free kick.
Tom Ince (Derby County) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Tom Ince (Derby County).
Sheyi Ojo (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Chris Martin (Derby County).
Kortney Hause (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Attempt missed. Tom Ince (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is too high from a direct free kick.
Bright Enobakhare (Wolverhampton Wanderers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Johnny Russell (Derby County) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Bright Enobakhare (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Jacob Butterfield (Derby County) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Conor Coady (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Bradley Johnson (Derby County) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by James Henry (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Bright Enobakhare replaces Adam Le Fondre.
Offside, Derby County. Scott Carson tries a through ball, but Chris Martin is caught offside.
Attempt saved. Johnny Russell (Derby County) left footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jacob Butterfield.
Substitution, Derby County. Chris Baird replaces Cyrus Christie.
Substitution, Derby County. Jacob Butterfield replaces Jeff Hendrick.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Delay in match Kevin McDonald (Wolverhampton Wanderers) because of an injury.
Attempt saved. Bradley Johnson (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner.
Jason Shackell (Derby County) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Adam Le Fondre (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Bradley Johnson (Derby County) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Conor Coady (Wolverhampton Wanderers).
Attempt missed. Tom Ince (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cyrus Christie.
Goal! Derby County 4, Wolverhampton Wanderers 2. Adam Le Fondre (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Sheyi Ojo with a headed pass.
Foul by Bradley Johnson (Derby County).
Adam Le Fondre (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conor Coady replaces Jack Price.
Substitution, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Sheyi Ojo replaces Jed Wallace. | Derby County climbed into the Championship play-off zone for the first time under new boss Paul Clement as they proved too good for Wolves. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The 26-year-old ex-Bristol City trainee scored six goals in 78 appearances over two seasons with the Grecians.
However, he was not offered a new deal at the end of the League Two season.
"He is powerful, a good athlete and has plenty of experience for someone his age so we think he will do very well for us," Oxford boss Michael Appleton told the club website.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. | Newly-promoted League One side Oxford United have signed Exeter right-back Christian Ribeiro on a two-year deal. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | In Aleppo the pro-regime offensive is continuing to squeeze rebel fighters into a smaller and smaller sector of the eastern part of the city.
Most commentators believe it is only a matter of time before the rebels lose their foot-hold entirely; either due to a final government offensive or through some kind of negotiated withdrawal to try to bring a respite to the remaining civilians there.
But in Palmyra, far to the south-east of Aleppo, it is so-called Islamic State that is on the offensive.
Over the weekend a force of some 4,000 fighters retook the city centre despite significant efforts by Russian air power to forestall their advance.
This represents something of an embarrassment for Moscow - Palmyra's recapture earlier this year was heralded as a major victory and proof positive that Russia's intervention could turn the tide of battle for President Assad's forces.
Palmyra's recapture was followed by a carefully staged propaganda event. The Russians flew in a symphony orchestra and put on a major show, presenting their victory as a triumph of the forces of culture over those of barbarism.
Syrian war: Red Cross doctor's heart-breaking letter from Aleppo
What's happening in Aleppo?
Why IS militants destroy ancient sites
Well the barbarians are back in Palmyra, Syrian government forces retreating west of the town where the battle continues.
So far Russian air power has not been able to turn the tide. It may only be a temporary setback for the Assad regime, but some Russian military commentators are noting that the concentration of IS fighters ahead of the offensive should have been spotted and dealt with.
The recapture of Palmyra highlights the residual weakness of Syrian government forces, to an extent obscured by the recent focus on Aleppo.
In reality the Syrian army is a shadow of the force that began this conflict some six years ago. Long years of bitter campaigning have taken a toll on personnel and equipment. But other factors are also in play.
A significant part of the Syrian military has simply fallen away to be integrated into a variety of localised militia forces, not so very different in structure from the rebels they are fighting. This is an aspect of the Syrian war that has not been given significant attention until recently.
Once again it is the open source intelligence analysts of Bellingcat who have scoured the internet to pull together a fascinating snapshot of this militia phenomenon.
The forces fighting on the side of the Assad regime are an extraordinary patchwork of units - some from the regular armed forces but equally as many from a variety of militias.
Some of these, Bellingcat says, may be no more than a few dozen men strong linked to a village or neighbourhood.
Other groups field a few thousand men, numerous pieces of armour and artillery and have a national presence, with their own training camps and networks. The Bellingcat study also notes that the ties of these groups to Damascus "and more importantly, the level of control Damascus exerts over them varies".
Bellingcat's Russian counterpart, the Conflict Intelligence Team, has also studied the links between the Russian military and some of these militias.
Again open source intelligence analysts have turned up pictures on Facebook sites - group photos with fighters posing with Russian officers and even Russians presenting gallantry medals to individual fighters.
Western analysts have been impressed by the proficiency of the Russian special forces' ability to work with such groups.
Of course there is a huge foreign contingent fighting on behalf of the Assad regime as well. In addition to Russia's role (it has supplied air power, artillery and special forces on the ground) Iran has also played a prominent part.
Iranian advisers have helped to co-ordinate a sizeable Iranian-proxy force of Shia militias recruited from Pakistan, the Gulf and elsewhere. The Iranian-backed Lebanese militia Hezbollah has also played a significant role in the fighting.
Military analysts believe that without Russia's intervention from the air and the huge additional manpower provided by these militias, the Assad regime would have been swept away.
So despite the regime's successes in Aleppo, it is the very weakness of the government forces that is the crucial factor here. As Palmyra shows, the government risks spreading its limited resources too thinly - it cannot hold all the places it has recaptured, and President Assad's claims that he will retake all the territory lost to his opponents is just empty bravado.
It is Syrian government weakness that will determine the next stage of the conflict once Aleppo falls. | The pendulum swing of military advantage in Syria is well-illustrated by the contrasting fortunes of the Syrian government forces in Aleppo and Palmyra. |
Can you summarize this content? | The Indian-based firm announced it was selling its loss-making UK business in March, putting thousands of jobs at risk, including 4,100 at Port Talbot.
There are two known bids, while the UK government could take a 25% stake in any rescue and may allow changes to Tata's pension scheme to help the sale.
But the steel market has picked up.
On Wednesday, Tata reported that losses narrowed in its fourth quarter.
It has led to speculation in the national media that the firm could perform a U-turn and not sell up.
"If that is the case, fine," Aberavon MP Mr Kinnock told BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement programme.
"If they do want to stay we would welcome that in principle," he said.
"But I would also say in practice steelworkers in my constituency, their families and communities around them have been through hell in the last few years and certainly since March when the sale was announced.
"I think they'll be forgiven for treating any news that Tata is staying on board with a degree of scepticism and even anger.
"So I think we need a very clear set of guarantees from Tata that they will be in it for the long run, that there will be investment and they will be doing what's needed so we're not back at square one 12 months from now." | Tata would need to give guarantees it is in the UK steel industry for the long run if it scraps its planned sale of plants, Stephen Kinnock has said. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | On Saturday, Corby Town defender Jason Lee started the party early, drinking some of a fan's pint while celebrating Ben Milnes' only goal in a 1-0 win over Mickleover Sports.
"After the goal was scored we all went off to celebrate with Ben, but a fan had spilled his pint, and another fan had thrown his pint up in the air," Lee told BBC Sport.
"Everyone was celebrating, everyone was drenched, but I didn't want the spilled pint to go to waste so I just thought I'd have a cheeky sip.
"I got busted, caught out by the photographer. Everyone within the five-metre radius thought it was funny. I thought I was just going to get a kick out of making those guys laugh, and now it's gone viral."
The victory took them out of the Northern Premier League drop zone, but the contents of the plastic cup took Lee by surprise.
"I thought it was going to be a lager, took a big swig, to find out it was a cider. I thought 'I can't stop here' so carried on," the centre-back added.
"But with about 10 or 15 minutes to go I got severe heartburn. Although it tasted nice and refreshing at the time, I just wouldn't recommend it for elite athletes."
Lee works for a building contractor and said those at work think he is now "some kind of famous person" after the picture was shared widely on social media.
"Hopefully for the rest of the season I hope I don't score another goal because I don't know how I could top that as a celebration," he said. | When your side scores a goal which takes them out of the relegation zone, sometimes the celebrations can get a little out of hand. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | The education secretary said he had discussed the matter with the inquiry chairwoman Lady Smith, amid criticism from abuse survivor groups that the remit of the investigation is "fixed".
Mr Swinney said he was "wrestling" with the issue as an extended remit would "inevitably" prolong the inquiry.
The probe of historical allegations of abuse is expected to last four years.
The inquiry, which is tasked with investigating the nature and extent of abuse of children in care in Scotland, has been dogged by problems from the outset.
Original chairwoman Susan O'Brien QC quit the post in July, complaining of government interference. A second member of the inquiry panel, Prof Michael Lamb, also resigned claiming the inquiry was "doomed".
The panel now consists of Lady Smith and Glenn Houston, although Mr Swinney has consulted Lady Smith on whether a third panel member should be recruited to replace Prof Lamb.
The remit of the inquiry has also been an issue, with Mr Swinney's predecessor Angela Constance defending it in February after claims some institutions such as the Catholic Church would be "let off the hook".
More recently there have been claims from survivors' groups that there had been "no discussions" about the remit of the inquiry, which they said was described by Lady Smith as "fixed".
However, Mr Swinney refuted this when questioned by Labour's Johann Lamont at the education committee.
He said: "I have personally discussed the question of extending the remit of the inquiry with Lady Smith.
"I said to people I would look at the extension of the remit, I'm considering that and taking steps to address that."
He continued: "I take it very seriously. But I have to be mindful that if I extend the remit of the inquiry, I would inevitably be extending the length of the inquiry. And I have to be mindful of the views of survivors who want this exercise to be proceeded with and not something that becomes longer than it needs to be, because they want to get answers on this.
"So the dilemmas on this are not easy, because they ultimately come down to that question that it's unavoidable that the length of time of the inquiry will be extended if I decide to extend the remit. That's a significant issue with which I am wrestling."
Mr Swinney also addressed the idea of government interference in the independent inquiry, saying he had "no desire" for the government to have any inappropriate involvement.
And he said the question of redress for victims was actively being explored. | John Swinney is "considering" extending the remit of the Scottish child abuse inquiry, he has told MSPs. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Mils Muliaina, 35, was alleged to have touched a woman "on the bottom over her trousers" in a busy Cardiff nightclub.
But on Monday, Cardiff Crown Court heard there was not enough evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and the case was dropped.
His defence said it was a case of mistaken identity.
He was arrested in April moments after a European Challenge Cup quarter-final match in Gloucester. TV cameras showed him being led away by police.
Outside court, an emotional Mr Muliaina said it had been a difficult time for him and his family.
"It's been incredibly frustrating not to be able to publicly comment about it," he said.
"While I understand the police have a job to do, the manner in which I was arrested I find difficult to understand.
"I can still hold my head up high and as the judge said this is no stain on my character. I have always known that I did not do anything wrong."
The 100-cap international, who has now signed for Italian Pro12 side Zebre, said he was looking forward to getting on with his life and plans to return home to New Zealand to see his son next week.
He added: "When I first found out the charges were going to be withdrawn I instantly thought of my son - he should have never have had to go through this.
"I'm looking forward to going back home and spending some time with him and wishing him a happy birthday."
Mr Muliaina retired from international duty in 2011.
The alleged incident was said to have taken place on 7 March while Mr Muliaina was in Cardiff for a league match against Cardiff Blues while playing for Irish side Connacht
Speaking on Monday, defending counsel John Charles Rees QC told the court the prosecution's case against his client had been "outrageous" and "wholly defective".
He said: "He is a professional athlete whose reputation has been reduced while the complainant remains anonymous.
"The allegation was that her bottom had been fleetingly touched on a busy nightclub dance floor.
"He has denied doing anything wrong from beginning to end."
His legal team said the mistaken identity case should never have come to court and that the defence would be applying for costs in the case. | A former New Zealand rugby player has spoken of his frustration over being taken to court on a sexual assault charge. |
Please summarize the passage below. | Coe told the committee he was unaware of specific cases of corruption before they became public in December 2014.
But former athlete Dave Bedford said he contacted Coe about Russian athlete Liliya Shobukhova in August that year.
Bedford added he spoke to Coe about a related matter on 21 November 2014.
Allegations of state-sponsored doping by Russian athletes, and cover-ups involving officials at the sport's world governing body the IAAF, were revealed in a documentary by German broadcaster ARD on 3 December 2014.
That is when Coe, who was elected IAAF president in August 2015, says he became aware of specific allegations.
Bedford, 67, said he was "very surprised and quite disappointed" to find Coe had not opened emails sent in August 2014, which provided details of alleged extortion from marathon runner Shobukhova, who was given a doping ban in 2014.
Coe, in his evidence to the committee, said he forwarded Bedford's emails to the IAAF's then recently formed ethics board, without reading them or opening the attachments.
Damian Collins, chair of the select committee, said Bedford's evidence "raised clear and important questions" about Coe's knowledge of the allegations, while Conservative MP Nigel Huddleston said the answers "undermined" the former Olympic champion's version of events.
In response, the IAAF said former London Marathon race director Bedford "offered nothing new" to the inquiry, and Coe has "no further information he can provide".
Collins then issued a further statement, saying Bedford's evidence "casts some doubt" on when Coe learned of specific allegations.
He added: "There are also questions about why Lord Coe didn't do more to make himself aware of the issues that were contained in the allegations that Bedford sent him."
Bedford agreed with the committee it was "strange" Coe had not opened his email attachments, and said he had no doubt the double Olympic champion knew about the Shobukhova case when they met in November 2014.
However, Bedford - a former 10,000m world record holder - also defended Coe, describing him "as someone within the IAAF who I could trust".
When asked to explain why Coe did not follow up on the email, Bedford suggested he may have decided the "best way he could help the sport was to make sure he got elected as president", as otherwise there was "no future" for athletics.
"In my opinion, looking at all the other alternatives, Seb Coe is the only chance athletics has to get over this difficult period," added Bedford.
The Premier League side have decided they need Barrow back in the squad to fill the void left by Nathan Dyer's loan move to Leicester City.
Gambia international Barrow, 22, made five appearances for Championship side Blackburn after joining on a three-month loan in August.
He won his second cap for Gambia in Sunday's African Cup of Nations 1-0 defeat by Cameroon.
A loan spell at Nottingham Forest was also cut short last season after injuries to Wayne Routledge and Jefferson Montero. | Lord Coe, the head of world athletics, will be recalled by the Culture, Media and Sport select committee, after MPs heard evidence that "undermined" his comments to them in December 2015.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Swansea City have recalled Modou Barrow from his loan at Blackburn Rovers. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | The sculptures of the martyrs stand in the medieval nave screen in St Albans Cathedral, which is thought to have been put up "quickly" in 1350.
It is believed to be the first time painted statues have been restored to a such a screen since the Reformation.
Sculptor Rory Young said working in the building had been a "huge privilege".
Niches in the nave screen were left empty and Mr Young believes this was because of the Black Death.
"I think the abbot probably said, 'Just get it done quickly' to keep [the clergy] separated from the people," he said.
"You can see the workmanship getting more and more hurried the further up you look."
The new statues were gifted to the cathedral by a former High Sheriff of Hertfordshire Richard Waldock, OBE, and lay canon Susan Walduck.
Four are martyrs with local connections - St Alban, Amphibalus, the priest he sheltered, Catholic priest Alban Roe, who was imprisoned in the Abbey Gatehouse, and Protestant George Tankerfield, who was burned at the stake near the cathedral.
Three lived in the 20th Century and represent the cathedral's ecumenical congregations - Russian Orthodox St Elisabeth Romanova, German Lutheran Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Roman Catholic Archbishop Oscar Romero.
Mr Young said: "Statues in churches are not normally painted and St Albans cathedral has more colour in it than any other in these islands in my opinion.
"If you can't do it here, you never will."
Cathedral Dean, the Very Revd Dr Jeffrey John said: "The presence of all these saints together... is a powerful statement that sanctity is not the possession of any one faith or denomination." | Seven statues have been installed to complete work that started more than 665 years ago as part of a cathedral's 900th anniversary celebrations. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Kiernan was sent off in the 3-2 defeat of St Johnstone on 1 March for a tackle on striker Graham Cummins.
After the Ibrox club lodged an appeal, the 26-year-old was allowed to play in Saturday's 6-0 Scottish Cup quarter-final win over Hamilton Academical.
But the claim of wrongful dismissal for serious foul play has been dismissed.
The Scottish FA convened a disciplinary tribunal on Thursday.
The Irish defender will also miss the Premiership match against Hamilton at Ibrox on 18 March. | Defender Rob Kiernan will miss Rangers' next two games, starting with Sunday's meeting with Celtic, after losing an appeal against a red card. |
Summarize the following piece. | A wishing well statue worth £500,000 was taken from the South Gloucestershire property between 7 and 9 May.
Two others of a horse and a rider, valued at about £25,000 each, were also taken.
Avon and Somerset Police said the break-in at Bath Road, Cold Ashton, was "targeted" and "well-planned".
PC Simon McFall added: "It would have taken a number of people to carry out this crime as the statues weigh a significant amount and would have required several people to lift them.
"They are also of a considerable size and it is more than likely that a van or other large vehicle was used to transport them."
Anyone with information is urged to contact the force. | More than half a million pounds worth of bronze artwork has been stolen from a former chapel. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Ronny Deila's team wrapped up a fifth title with victory over Aberdeen in Glasgow on Sunday and are currently 12 points clear of the second-top Dons.
Rangers will be in the Premiership next season after winning the Championship and beat Celtic in the Scottish Cup.
But Griffiths said: "Aberdeen will go away and strengthen and push us again."
More to follow. | Celtic striker Leigh Griffiths expects Aberdeen, not Rangers, to be the biggest challengers to his side for the Scottish title next season. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Dennehy, 33, from Peterborough, is serving life for the murders of three men in 2013.
A report highlights "deficiencies" by the probation service, but says there is "no evidence that these contributed directly" to the deaths.
Christina Lee, widow of victim Kevin Lee, criticised the failings.
"We have been left numb by the failings identified... and it has left us wondering whether my husband would still be alive today had they done their job properly," she said.
Joanne Dennehy: The woman with a 'sadistic lust for blood'
Dennehy had been given a community order of 12 months for assault and being in control of a dangerous dog.
She was supervised by the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Probation service, but she missed appointments with probation officers after going to Lincolnshire.
The restricted report, seen by the BBC, says a "more experienced offender manager" should have been appointed to deal with the "complexities" of the case.
It says there was no contact with Dennehy when she was in prison which was a "missed opportunity".
The probation service risk appraisal of Dennehy was that she had the "potential to cause serious harm" but was unlikely to do so "unless there was a significant change in circumstances".
The report said the probation service should have looked into this further.
It recommends the probation services undertake greater "risk of harm" analysis of cases and that there is additional training for probation officers.
Dennehy murdered Lukasz Slaboszewski, 31, Kevin Lee, 48, and John Chapman, 56, in March 2013 before dumping their bodies.
She went on the run and subsequently stabbed dog walkers Robin Bereza, 64, and 56-year-old John Rogers in Hereford.
The Probation Service has yet to comment.
The hatchlings ate meat with their teeth, then used beaks to peck at plants as adults, say scientists.
The discovery is a surprise and has not been seen in any other reptile.
Limusaurus inextricabilis lived in China around 150 million years ago. The first fossilised remains of the animal were discovered about a decade ago.
"Initially, we believed that we found two different ceratosaurian dinosaurs from the Wucaiwan area, one toothed and the other toothless, and we even started to describe them separately," said Shuo Wang of Capital Normal University in Beijing, China, who led the research.
The palaeontologists then realised that the dinosaurs looked remarkably similar, except for the presence of teeth.
They found that the dinosaur lost its teeth over time, making it the first known reptile to do this.
Dr Stephen Brusatte, of the University of Edinburgh, who was not part of the research team, said it was a stunning discovery.
"Up until now, who would have thought that there were dinosaurs that had teeth as babies, started to lose them as they grew up and then ended up as toothless adults with beaks?" he told BBC News.
"Nothing like this is seen in any other fossil vertebrate and the platypus is the only modern land-living vertebrate that does anything similar."
The dinosaurs were switching from one sort of feeding type that required teeth to one in which teeth were a disadvantage, and a beak was better, said Dr Stig Walsh of National Museums Scotland.
"Other theropod dinosaurs in the group to which Limusaurus belongs are carnivores and I can't help wondering whether the driver for such a life cycle change was to allow Limusaurus to capitalise on a more abundant food source as they became larger," he added.
Limusaurus (mud lizard) was a fairly old and primitive theropod dinosaur.
It belongs to the same group as well-known carnivores like T. rex and Velociraptor.
The researchers think the toothed juveniles were probably omnivorous meat-eaters. The adults, which had beaks, moved on to a plant-based diet.
The discovery will help explain how the beak, which is so important in the bird kingdom, evolved.
Tooth loss is more common in modern animals.
Some fish and amphibians lose teeth as they grow, as do platypuses.
The research is published in the journal Current Biology.
Follow Helen on Twitter. | Triple killer Joanne Dennehy was under the supervision of probation workers when she murdered three men, the BBC can reveal.
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Some dinosaurs lost their teeth as they grew up, according to fossil evidence. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Glasgow went down 38-13 at Allianz Park and had their errors routinely punished by the defending champions.
Townsend says his players will be stronger for their last-eight foray.
"They have to learn that this is the highest level of the game and there are things you have to get right," the head coach told BBC Scotland.
"Physicality is one. We have to keep that physicality in attack and defence up for 80 minutes, because teams like Saracens do.
"Execution - the plays you work on during the week have to come off and you have to nail whatever it is - line-outs, scrums, passing moves and you've got to take your chances in big games like this."
After trailing 14-3 at the break, Lee Jones hauled Glasgow back within a score when he gathered Finn Russell's kick and battled between Alex Goode and Chris Ashton to touch down.
The momentum appeared to be swinging the Warriors' way, but mistakes from the visitors, and furious counterattacking from the hosts, released the pressure, with Sarries sealing their semi-final berth by scoring three tries of their own.
"We're disappointed the players weren't able to play at their best today," added Townsend.
"A big part of that was the opposition we were up against, but we weren't as accurate as we needed to be in a big game like that.
"We believed in the group, believed we could win, but it's very unusual for a team to win on their first occasion in the last eight.
"What we've learned today has got to keep for the next few years. We failed in the Pro12 on a few occasions and finally made the breakthrough (winning the title in 2015).
"So we've got to use this learning today for when the players next play together, when they play at international level, but definitely when they play for the club over the next few years." | Gregor Townsend admits Glasgow Warriors were too slack to overcome a ruthless Saracens side in their maiden European Champions Cup quarter-final. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | It is less than cuts pledged by countries such as Canada and the US.
Australia's previous target was to cut emissions by 5% by 2020, based on emissions in 2000.
The announcement comes ahead of a key international meeting in Paris in December to agree on a new global climate strategy.
Australia is still largely powered by carbon-polluting coal and is one of the world's biggest coal exporters.
Mr Abbott said Australia had to protect economic growth at the same time as it reduced emissions.
"It is very much that everything we do has this in mind: how do we promote jobs and growth... and climate change policy is no different," he said at a press conference in Canberra.
"We have to reduce our emissions... but in ways that are consistent with continued strong growth."
Mr Abbott said Australia's target was within the middle of the spread of targets adopted by economies of comparable size.
He said the cost to the economy of achieving a 26% cut by 2030 would equate to between about 0.2% and 0.3% of Australia's gross domestic product (GDP).
Scientist Tim Flannery from independent not-for-profit research group the Climate Council, said even if Australia met this target, it would still be emitting more per person than the US and "significantly more" than the UK, on a per capital basis.
"These targets are vastly inadequate to protect Australians from the impacts of climate change and do not represent a fair contribution to the world effort to bring climate change under control," said Prof Flannery.
The Climate Council says that to stay below a 2°C rise in global temperature, Australia would need to cut emissions by 60% by 2030 on 2000 levels.
It says Australia is the 13th largest greenhouse gas emitter in the world and has one of the highest per capita emissions rates. | Australia plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions by between 26% and 28% below 2005 levels by 2030, PM Tony Abbott has said. |
Please summarize the document below. | The Baggies turned down four bids from Tottenham for the 22-year-old striker, including two on 1 September.
He went on Twitter to indicate he would never play for Albion again but he came on against Southampton on Saturday.
"The lads have given him some stick. Sometimes it's the best way because it takes away the tension," Fletcher said.
"When somebody comes in and there is a little bit of banter, I'm sure he feels like one of the lads again."
Scotland midfielder Fletcher, who is not on Twitter, said: "It's about emotions really.
"You can do silly things and when you're on Twitter it allows you to voice your opinions. If he had sat quietly for 48 hours he wouldn't have done it."
Ann Maguire, 61, was stabbed to death by Will Cornick at Corpus Christi Catholic College, Leeds, in April 2014.
A High Court judge has ruled against the call for a judicial review of the coroner's decision.
Her widower Don said the family were "disappointed, not surprised".
He added: "We've been pulled backwards and forwards through the proverbial hedge quite a few times in the last few years.
"We're still hopeful that somebody will examine the full circumstances surrounding the brutal and tragic murder of Ann and that proper lessons will be learned."
More on this and other Leeds stories
The inquest is scheduled to begin at Wakefield Coroners' Court in November.
Dismissing the claim for a judicial review, judge Mr Justice Holroyde said: "I have much sympathy for the claimants, and I fully understand their reasons for wishing to pursue this line of inquiry.
"However, I am unable to accept the submission that the assistant coroner reached a decision which was so seriously flawed as to be unreasonable."
The request for a judicial review was opposed by others, including the sisters of Mrs Maguire.
One of them, Sheila Connor, also a teacher, said she was worried about students being questioned as to their actions, or lack of action, before the killing, and the possibility of attaching blame to them.
Her views were echoed by Dominic Kelly, the vice-principal of Notre Dame Sixth Form College in Leeds, who said in 2016 that some of its pupils had expressed "concern that they could have prevented the tragedy" and "guilt that they had failed to protect their teacher".
In additional report in May, he added: "The risk of formally and publicly asking the students involved questions that they have been asking themselves for three years is far greater than any perceived benefit that could be gained."
The Maguire family had wished the coroner to call former pupils, especially those interviewed by the police.
Many of them heard Cornick make threats and claim to have knives in his bag on the day of the murder.
Most did not take his comments seriously but he threatened a fellow student who said he would report him.
Mr Justice Holroyde said those recorded police interviews should be sufficient for the assistant coroner to consider.
He said: "The assistant coroner was entitled to conclude that there was a clear risk of harm to former pupils in calling them to give evidence, but that there was little prospect of their oral evidence assisting materially in ascertaining the circumstances of Mrs Maguire's death or in learning lessons for the future."
Cornick, who was 15 at the time, was given a life sentence in 2014 after he admitted murdering Mrs Maguire, who had taught Spanish at Corpus Christi for more than 40 years.
In November 2016, a report by Leeds Safeguarding Children Board said no-one could have predicted or prevented Mrs Maguire's murder. | Saido Berahino has faced West Brom dressing room "banter" about his threat to go on strike on deadline day, says his captain Darren Fletcher.
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The widower and children of a teacher murdered by a student have lost their legal challenge against a coroner's decision not to call pupils as witnesses at a forthcoming inquest. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | Marissa Birch was also found to be heavily intoxicated and unable to care for the girl just months later.
She was not at work at the time of the incidents in 2014 but was an employee of a nursery in Kilwinning, Ayrshire.
The Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) said Ms Birch had also failed to inform them about her criminal history.
She was convicted and charged with two counts of breach of the peace in 2012 and 2014, and with racially aggravated harassment in 2015.
Two of these incidents took place after she had been suspended while an investigation was being carried out.
The SSSC said it had been unacceptable for Ms Birch to hit the child, and she had been convicted of a number of serious allegations.
The watchdog said: "The sub-committee could not be satisfied that the behaviour would not be repeated.
"Whilst none of the behaviour took place at work, given your chaotic lifestyle, the sub-committee could not be satisfied that the behaviour will not be repeated during the course of your employment.
"You placed the victims of your crimes in a state of fear and alarm.
"The behaviour falls well below the standard expected of a registered worker."
In its findings, the council noted that Ms Birch had no previous record with the SSSC and she had "expressed some regret".
The council ruled that a removal order was "the only appropriate sanction which would safeguard the interests of service users, the public and the reputation of the social services profession".
"A very nice letter from Vladimir Putin; his thoughts are so correct," Mr Trump said about the note, which is dated 15 December 2016.
On Thursday the two leaders called for their respective nations to boost their nuclear arsenals.
Earlier, Mr Trump seemed to welcome the notion of a nuclear arms race.
"Let it be an arms race because we will outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all," MSNBC journalist Mika Brzezinski says the President-elect told her in a statement over the phone, in response to a question about his tweet from the day earlier.
On Thursday Mr Trump tweeted that the US "must greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability", only after hours after President Putin had called for his own military to "strengthen the military potential of strategic nuclear forces".
In the letter released by the Trump transition team, Mr Putin says he hopes that "we will be able - by acting in a constructive and pragmatic manner - to take real steps to restore the framework of bilateral cooperation in different areas as well as bring our level of collaboration to the international scene to a qualitatively new level".
Experts believe that Mr Putin hopes that the next US president will remove economic sanctions by the US Department of Treasury which have been placed on Russian officials following the invasion and annexation of Crimea.
At an annual media briefing on Friday in Moscow, the Russian president said he saw nothing remarkable in Mr Trump's tweet, making it clear that he does not view the US as a potential aggressor.
Donald Trump has been seen as close to Mr Putin and the Russian government, and drew condemnation from both Republicans and Democrats when he announced his selection of Rex Tillerson to be secretary of state, the top US diplomat.
The CEO of ExxonMobil has worked closely with Russian state oil company Rosneft, spoken out against international sanctions imposed on Moscow, and in 2013 was awarded an Order of Friendship by the Kremlin.
In response to the note from Mr Putin, the Republican president-elect praised the Russian president's words, calling them "so correct".
"I hope both sides are able to live up to these thoughts, and we do not have to travel an alternate path," the New York billionaire concluded. | A nursery worker who punched a six year old in the face and leg has been struck off.
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US President-elect Donald Trump's transition team have released a letter that they say was sent to him by Russian President Vladimir Putin. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | She also congratulated Kezia Dugdale and Alex Rowley on their election as Scottish leadership team.
Ms Murray said many of her friends in the party would "strongly disagree" with her support for Mr Corbyn.
But in a Facebook post, she said that like him she wanted to see a "kinder, more inclusive politics".
"He is criticised for breaking the whip - if he is leader he will have to respect and listen to others who don't agree with him," she added.
"He will need to forge consensus within and outside the Labour Party.
"The macho, confrontational style of British politics alienates so many people who care about the issues but hate the rhetoric."
She also welcomed the appointments of Ms Dugdale and Mr Rowley.
"They are brave to put themselves forward at a difficult time for Scottish Labour. They deserve our support and should not shoulder the blame if we don't form the next Scottish government," she said.
"Being a constructive and effective opposition is probably a much more achievable aim."
The 29-year-old Finland international was tested after CSKA's 2-2 draw with Bayer Leverkusen in the Champions League on 14 September. He scored the Russian club's equaliser.
His ban runs until 6 October 2018.
A Uefa statement said: "The analysis of the A sample revealed the presence of cocaine and its metabolites."
Valentin Stocker opened the scoring for Hertha six minutes after the break.
Striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang had a penalty saved for the hosts, but then converted Ousmane Dembele's cutback 10 minutes from time to earn a point.
Emre Mor was sent off for Dortmund after a push on Sebastian Langkamp, with goalscorer Stocker also dismissed.
The Swiss forward was sent off for a dangerous tackle in the final seconds.
The draw was a club-record 25th successive unbeaten home game for Dortmund, but the second game in a row they have failed to win after defeat by Bayer Leverkusen last time out.
Thomas Tuchel's side are third behind Hertha and leaders Bayern Munich, who play Eintracht Frankfurt on Saturday. | Dumfriesshire Labour MSP Elaine Murray has revealed her support for Jeremy Corbyn in the contest to become her party's new UK leader.
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CSKA Moscow midfielder Roman Eremenko has been banned from football for two years after testing positive for cocaine.
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Borussia Dortmund were held to a draw by second-placed Hertha Berlin in a Bundesliga match featuring two red cards and a missed penalty. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Chasing 183, Australia reached 83-1 before rain arrived after 16 overs - four short of the number needed for a result.
Tamim Iqbal made 95 in Bangladesh's 182 all out as Mitchell Starc took four wickets in nine balls.
Both sides will take a point, with England still top of the group.
Australia, who benefitted from the rain during their opening match against New Zealand, will have been frustrated at the abandonment as they were on top when the rain arrived.
Their fast bowlers, who were criticised by captain Steve Smith after the first game, provided pace and accuracy to restrict Bangladesh before they made a composed start with the bat.
Both sides can still qualify for the semi-finals, with Bangladesh set to play New Zealand on Friday, while Australia face England on Saturday.
Against New Zealand, Australia were wobbling at 53-3 after nine overs and were struggling to deal with the pace bowlers when rain ended play.
Here, they had the upper hand as they calmly moved towards Bangladesh's total.
Despite losing Aaron Finch to Rubel Hossain, opener David Warner - a batsman who has added a calmer element to his game in the last 18 months - accumulated sensibly, passing 4,000 career ODI runs.
Warner is the fastest Australian to reach the landmark and the third fastest overall, after South Africa's Hashim Amla and West Indies legend Viv Richards.
Ably supported by Smith, Australia got themselves into prime position, before the rain intervened. They were briefly set a revised target of 166 from 43 overs, but further rain brought a halt to proceedings at 21:21 BST.
Bangladesh opted to bat despite the gloomy overhead conditions, and would have been confident of posting a good score after their impressive antics against England.
Australia's bowlers found the rhythm that had been missing against New Zealand, and Tamim - who made a century against England on Thursday - seemed to be the only player able to navigate the bowlers.
He took 16 runs from a Moises Henriques over, launching the ball into the crowd for six before striking boundaries to either side of the ground.
His half-century - his 37th in ODI cricket - saw him loosen his feet and he struck spinner Travis Head for two sixes to move within touching distance of a second century.
Despite cameos from Shakib al Hasan (29) and Mehedi Hasan Miraz (14), once Iqbal top-edged a short delivery from Starc, it felt like a matter of time before Bangladesh's innings came to a close.
Australia's fast bowlers were wasteful against New Zealand, prompting Smith to describe it as "one of the worst bowling displays we've put on for a very long time".
Starc went wicketless in his first six overs and struggled with his line, while fellow pace bowlers Josh Hazlewood (1-40) and Pat Cummins (1-22) profited.
It was leg-spinner Adam Zampa who started the collapse. Kept out of the attack by Smith until the 35th over, he claimed two wickets in 11 balls to set up the tail for left-armer Starc.
Starc has excelled at the end of an innings for Australia in the past - he ended the 2015 World Cup as the tournament's leading wicket taker - and utilised all of his skiddy pace and full deliveries to dismiss Bangladesh.
Consecutive yorkers to dismiss Mashrafe Mortaza and Rubel set up a hat-trick but the ball somehow swung beyond the stumps, before Starc ended the innings just five balls later to finish with 4-29.
Australia captain Steve Smith: "The game the other day we weren't in a great position to win, although funnier things have happened. This game we were going pretty well and things were looking good.
"The equation is pretty simple for us now."
Bangladesh captain Mashrafe Mortaza: "If you look at today's match, I think Australia was far ahead than us, and if you look at the last match against New Zealand and Australia, I think Australia was also in the same position as us.
"We have to beat New Zealand and obviously we have to wait for a few results as well. So our job is to play hard against New Zealand and if we can go through, then you never know." | Rain frustrated Australia and kept Bangladesh's Champions Trophy hopes alive as their Group A match was abandoned at The Oval. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | The company said it had raised its interest in the Maersk Oil-operated Culzean development from 16% to 32%.
It did not disclose how much it paid co-venturer JX Nippon for the additional stake.
The development, which lies about 145 miles east of Aberdeen, is one of the largest gas fields discovered in the North Sea in more than a decade.
The gas condensate field has resources estimated at 250-300 million barrels, according to BP.
Production is due to start in 2019 and continue into the 2030s, with plateau production of 60,000-90,000 barrels per day.
It is expected to produce enough gas to meet 5% of total UK demand when it reaches peak production in 2020-21.
Mark Thomas, from BP, said: "This is a challenging time for the industry and we must continue to work together to ensure that when developments like Culzean, or other projects such as BP's Quad 204 and Clair Ridge, come online they can be run as efficiently as possible."
He added: "BP has been focusing and refreshing its North Sea portfolio by bringing new fields into production, redeveloping and renewing existing producing facilities and divesting some of its more mature or less strategic assets.
"Our deepening in Culzean further demonstrates our commitment to supporting the development of another UK field for the future."
UK Energy Secretary Amber Rudd said: "With BP doubling investment in Culzean gas field, the opening of Total's new Shetland facility today and new powers for the Oil and Gas Authority through the UK government's Energy Bill becoming law, this has been a good week for our oil and gas industry." | Oil giant BP has doubled its stake in a major gas field in the North Sea as part of a £7bn investment programme. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | 20 November 2015 Last updated at 02:06 GMT
They'll be joined by the leaders of the US, China and India.
One of the key topics for discussion is the ASEAN Economic Community, or AEC, which aims for regional economic integration by the end of the year.
So just how close is the AEC in reality? Jonathan Head reports.
Nathalie Evans was initially a business rival of Molly Badham, both running pet shops in Sutton Coldfield in the 1940s.
After the pair joined forces, they opened a zoo near Tamworth, Staffordshire, before moving to the current site in south Leicestershire.
Twycross said Ms Evans was at the "forefront of modernising the way zoological gardens were run".
Ms Evans, who died earlier this month, and Ms Badham, who died in 2007, gained fame in the 1950s when they allowed their chimpanzees to appear in television adverts for PG Tips tea.
The training of the apes, the last of which died in April, was down to Ms Badham while Ms Evans concentrated on the business side of the operation.
Conservation projects were funded from money from the ads and it also enabled the creation of ape studbooks, used for safe breeding of gibbons and chimps.
She and Ms Badham became "specialists" in the field and their work was acknowledged across the world.
Twycross Zoo is now recognised as the World Primate Centre and has all four types of great ape in its collection.
Ms Evans opened her pet shop with money made from dog breeding.
In the 1940s, she saw her first monkey in the window of her rival Ms Badham's shop and the two began working and living together.
They took in unwanted animals, including a circus lion, at their bungalow in Hints, near Tamworth.
Their collection grew and they established Twycross Zoo in 1963, where Ms Evans worked until she retired at 86.
The zoo said: "[Nathalie Evans] leaves behind a legacy and financial platform from which a new generation of conservationists continue a remarkable woman's lifetime's work.
"Nathalie will be sadly missed throughout the zoo world."
This year's event is on Tuesday, 27 December but three of the last six races were run in January after weather postponements.
"The weather forecast this year is very much on our side," said racecourse executive director Phil Bell.
"The weather figures outside are plus-five and plus-10; not much rain at all so we're 99.9% certain to race."
A record 102 original entries have been made for the race with trainers and owners attracted by a £30,000 rise in prize money, which now stands at £150,000 for the race.
Among the prospective runners this year are Native River, winner of the Hennessey Gold Cup at Newbury, Grand National runner-up Last Samurai and former Cheltenham Gold Cup winner Lord Windermere.
The 2015 race was run in January, 2016 and won for the second time by Mountainous.
Bell says past postponements have has caused financial problems with smaller crowds attending on rescheduled dates.
"We get crowds in excess of 10,000 and if we do have to re-run it in January, that crowd drops by about a third.
"We are looking at every single weather website. We have our own forecasting service who we speak to daily."
If the weather takes a turn for the worse, Bell says plans are in place to use covers costing £30,000 to beat the effects of frost or rain.
"We'll do everything we can. We'll put every precaution into place that we can," said Bell.
"Money will be no object. It's incredibly expensive to cover the racecourse, but we will do that to give the race every chance of going ahead."
Saturday: More than one way to get into Number 10, as many PMs have discovered
Sunday: The trials of being on the campaign trail
Monday: The effect of the campaign on politicians' eating habits
Tuesday: David Cameron & Ed Miliband weren't born when the Queen acceded to the throne
Wednesday: Where will #GE2015 be won and lost?
Thursday: The last tie in a constituency vote was recorded 129 years ago
Friday: Size doesn't always matter for #GE2015 constituencies. How does yours measure up?
Find #BBCGoFigure on Twitter and on Facebook | Hot on the heels of the APEC conference in Manila, regional and global heads of government are now heading to Malaysia for a summit of the ten member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
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The co-founder of Twycross Zoo - which was once home to the PG Tips chimps - has died aged 98.
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Organisers of the Welsh Grand National at Chepstow are "99.9% certain" the 2016 race will go ahead on schedule.
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Look back at the week of election campaigning in numbers with our Go Figure images, which are posted daily on social media. |
Summarize the following piece. | In just two words, Josh Hawkins teaches the basics of the Australian vernacular.
The 30-year-old's advice is to "abbreviate everything".
"We're from Australia. We love a good chat, but not for too long," Josh says at the start of the video, which also stars local actor Rhys Keir.
The pair then run through a list of some of Australia's favourite abbreviations, including:
The clip has already been viewed on Facebook more than 1.5m times since it was uploaded on Monday.
It has been a surprise success for Josh, and a little like lightning striking twice, after he made headlines in May for his trick-shot video "The thug life chose me".
"It was pretty insane and I didn't think it would happen again," he told the BBC.
His only regret: misspelling the town of Wollongong (south of Sydney).
"Practically the whole town has been messaging me.
"I was in a rush so I didn't spell-check it and I got a whole bunch of messages today."
He says he will use his appearance on breakfast television on Wednesday to issue a very public apology to Wollongong. | A youth pastor from Sydney has created a stir online with his very simple tutorial titled How to Speak Australian. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | Media playback is not supported on this device
The 45-year-old is among those being considered as a replacement for David Moyes after the Black Cats' relegation.
"It just doesn't play a part to be honest," he said before Saturday's game. "There's loads of speculation at this stage of the season."
McInnes would not be drawn on whether he would welcome an approach.
"All my interest is on tomorrow's game and preparing the team," he said.
Aberdeen, who finished runners-up to Brendan Rodgers' side in the Scottish Premiership and lost to the Glasgow side in the League Cup, stand between Celtic and a fourth domestic treble.
McInnes insisted that denying them their first such feat since 2001 was no extra incentive for him and his side.
But he stated: "I think the level of player they have and the performances they've produced, anything other than a treble would be disappointing for them.
"I think more Celtic teams should have won the treble in the last few years and, for whatever reason, they haven't."
"So, while we put ourselves under pressure to win, we've still had a very good season even if we lose tomorrow.
"But we can have a brilliant season - a season to remember - and a special season by winning this tomorrow."
"The players are really relaxed and we are going into the game taking confidence from the performances we've had of late," he said of a side that have won their last six games away from Pittodrie.
"I feel we couldn't be more ready."
However, McInnes recognised the task ahead of his players if they are to end Celtic's season-long unbeaten domestic run.
"We probably need a near-perfect performance from the majority," he said.
Aberdeen have lost their last six games against Celtic, but McInnes stressed: "I thoroughly believe there is a performance in us that can beat them.
"I think we have got closer to them in the last couple of games."
Midfielder Ryan Jack was stripped of the captaincy before the final after deciding to leave the club this summer at the end of his current contract.
However, McInnes stressed that he will have no qualms about fielding the 25-year-old in the final.
"It's ridiculous to think he wouldn't be fully committed during tomorrow's game," he added.
"He's an Aberdeen boy and he'd love nothing more in his last game for Aberdeen to be a Scottish Cup winner.
"There are a few in that boat who are moving and hopefully they can finish in a blaze of glory and be a winner at the end of it." | Aberdeen manager Derek McInnes says attracting the interest of Sunderland has not been a distraction ahead of the Scottish Cup final against Celtic. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | Tamara Rojo told Radio Times magazine that children were often praised for quick results rather than hard work.
"We live in a society that rewards fast success based on little talent or commitment, which is transient and a dangerous place to be," she said.
"Do we want to promote instant success and instant failure, or do we want to promote self-esteem and hard work?"
The Spanish dancer, who is also the artistic director of the ballet company, began classes at the age of five, and joined her first ballet company aged 11.
She said her success was based upon persistence and hard work.
"I never had natural flexibility or the physical abilities that some people had.
"I had a strong technique and was hard-working - I trained for six hours, six days a week from the age of 11 - and that made up for the things I didn't naturally have.
"I rose up the company very fast and was a principal by 18."
Carlos Acosta, who has partnered Rojo in several productions, including Romeo and Juliet, once attested to the ballerina's perseverance, saying she had "no sense of pain or exhaustion".
Rojo took over at the English National Ballet two years ago, shortly before her 38th birthday.
Since then, she has overhauled its programme with a new production of Le Corsaire, and a bold, contemporary season of works inspired by World War One.
One of those, Akram Khan's Dust, was performed at Glastonbury; while earlier this year, Rojo announced a triple-bill dedicated to female choreography for the ballet's 2015/16 season.
The ballerina, who is a judge on the BBC Young Dancer award, has previously spoken of her desire to create a legacy.
"I hope to inspire a whole new generation of dancers that will in turn become teachers, choreographers and managers themselves," she told the Telegraph last year.
"I think you can really transform attitudes both for the audience and the artists and therefore you can grow a healthy, productive and interesting art form."
Rojo is also a strong believer in government subsidies for the arts - which she says are necessary for companies to take creative "gambles".
She told the Radio Times it was "a shame that during the elections there is no money promised for the arts", adding: "We have proven the business case and we have proven the social case." | The principal dancer at the English National Ballet says many of today's pupils lack the discipline to succeed. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The 21-year-old woman was one of the subjects of the investigation and is in a serious but stable condition.
A raid also took place in Kent, with six people arrested in total.
Officers say the operation was not connected to an arrest near Parliament on Thursday, when a man was detained on suspicion of terror offences.
The house in Harlesden Road, Willesden, which was raided on Thursday evening, had been under observation by police.
Those arrested included a 16-year-old boy, a man and woman, both aged 20 and another man and woman both aged 28. A 43-year-old woman was also arrested in Kent. All of them were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation and instigation of terrorist acts.
The woman who was shot is under police guard in hospital but has not been arrested "due to her condition",
Alex Paton, 50, who lives in Harlesden Road, said he saw a woman "getting all cuffed up and put in a white suit".
He described seeing "coppers and masked men with guns".
Another resident said she had heard the "bang, bang, bang" of shots.
A neighbour of the raided property suggested the shot woman had suffered injuries to her left arm and stomach.
He said the family who lived there were from Somalia.
Ruth Haile, who lives in the road, said she heard shots and the woman on the ground shouting: "Don't touch me, my body, don't touch my dress."
It is believed to be the first time a woman has been shot by police in 10 years. The last time was in 2007 when Ann Sanderson was fatally shot in Kent.
Police said searches had taken place at "linked addresses", as well as where the arrests took place.
Neil Basu, deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said: "Due to these arrests that have been made yesterday, in both cases I believe that we have contained the threats that they pose."
By home affairs correspondent Dominic Casciani
The intelligence convinced Scotland Yard they needed to go in fast and hard to carry out arrests.
That means they feared there was some kind of threat that needed to be contained - a threat that required a large team of the most highly-trained available officers.
They fired CS gas canisters into the building, smashing holes in the top front window.
The 21-year-old woman who was shot is not one of those under arrest - but has been described by police as one of the "subjects" - security services speak for someone at the heart of an operation.
We don't know anything about how and why she was injured and that will be subject of a police watchdog investigation, as is always the case.
Read more from Dominic here
The Willesden raid has been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission and the Met's directorate of professional standards, as is procedure.
The IPCC said it was gathering evidence but that no officers were under investigation.
On Thursday, police arrested a 27-year-old man at the junction of Parliament Street and Parliament Square, in London, as part of an intelligence-led operation.
He was identified on Friday as Khalid Mohamed Omar Ali, a British national who is believed to have gone to school in Tottenham, north London, but was not born in the UK.
The Met said he had been detained on suspicion of terrorism offences and that knives were recovered from the scene.
He had been on the force's radar for some time and it is thought police acted after a concerned family member contacted them.
Home Secretary Amber Rudd said she had spoken to the Met about both incidents and thanked them for their actions.
"I would like to reinforce my gratitude to the police and security services, who work tirelessly around the clock to keep the people of this country safe," she said.
"They carry out their duties with calmness and professionalism, and we are all grateful for their dedication."
Get news from the BBC in your inbox, each weekday morning | Police say they have foiled an active terror plot after a woman was shot during a raid on a house in Willesden, north-west London. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Sir Michael Fallon said major Army bases at Fort George in the Highlands, Glencorse Barracks, near Penicuik, and Redford Cavalry and Infantry Barracks in Edinburgh would shut.
Stirling's Meadowforth Barracks and three other bases will also close.
They are among 56 sites which will shut across the UK.
Naval base MoD Caledonia in Rosyth, Craigiehall Barracks in Edinburgh and Forthside Barracks in Stirling will also be shut down.
Fort George, near Ardersier, will close as an active barracks in 2032.
The 18th Century artillery fort currently houses soldiers from the Black Watch (3 SCOTS).
The Black Watch battalion currently stationed there will be moved to another base in Scotland.
But Sir Michael also announced that Kinloss Barracks in Moray is to remain open for the foreseeable future.
The closing dates for the bases are Meadowforth Barracks - 2022, Redford Cavalry Barracks - 2022, Redford Infantry Barracks - 2022, Fort George - 2032, Glencorse Barracks - 2032, MoD Caledonia - 2022, Forthside Stirling - 2022, Craigiehall Scottish Army HQ - 2018.
The defence secretary told the Commons that the defence estate was ''vital, but too vast'' and too inefficient, and that the closures would help to deliver better value for money and allow the release of land to build 55,000 houses "where they are needed most".
He added: "We have been spending billions maintaining a defence estate that doesn't meet the needs of our Armed Forces. This plan delivers an estate fit for our forces and their families.
"By putting money where it is needed, we will provide better facilities to train our Armed Forces and deliver more stability for military families."
The SNP's defence spokesman at Westminster, Brendan O'Hara, said Scotland's defence facilities had been "hollowed out and sold out" because of the UK government's "obsession" with nuclear weapons.
Sir Michael responded by saying that the government was investing more in Scotland, with additional personnel being stationed at RAF Lossiemouth and work on eight Royal Navy frigates to begin on the Clyde next year.
Deputy First Minister John Swinney described the closures as "a huge blow" for Scotland.
He said: "Our defence footprint has been worn away through successive cuts, so it is unacceptable that the UK government has announced a near 20% reduction to our defence footprint. This comes just three years after the last Army Basing Plan, billed as offering stability and certainty.
"These brutal cuts spell the near total removal of the Army from large parts of Scotland and the end of the Royal Navy's presence in Fife. It is deeply distressing to witness the announcement to close truly historic sites, such as Glencorse, home to the Army for almost 150 years, and Fort George, a garrison for almost 250 years."
Margaret Davidson, leader of Highland Council, said the withdrawal of the Army from Fort George would take £20m out of the local economy.
Local businesses supply the site and there are about 200 armed forces families connected to the base.
Ms Davidson said: "Fort George is a huge symbol in Highland life. It is a presence of the Army in our community. It is going to be a great loss."
What currently goes on behind the imposing walls at Fort George?
It is summer-time, and on a parade ground inside Fort George a soldier from the Crimean War is relaxing and tucking into a Cornetto.
Elsewhere, Roman legionnaires, chainmail clad knights, Jacobite fighters and government red coats mingle with young families and overseas tourists who have poured over a draw bridge into the fortification.
In an arena, the crowd is entertained by demonstrations of Viking raids and infantry drills from hundreds of years ago.
Read more here.
Major General Alastair Dickinson, who is the director of Army basing and infrastructure, described the announcement as "the right thing to do" from a military perspective.
He said: "It's incredibly sad and we're very conscious of this but the reality is - let's take Fort George as an example - we've got 21st Century soldiers. They need 21st Century equipment. They need 21st Century training and they need 21st Century accommodation.
"Fort George is a great monument. It's a great tourist attraction, but it's a listed building and it's very difficult to get it to the point where we can have 21st Century living and as a result we have got to move.
"From a military sense I think this is the right thing to do. We've got an estate that's too big. We've got to do something about it and we are doing.
"The way that this will work is that we will use three hubs of specialism and centres of capability. What we'll be able to do is put two or three regiments and the same sort of individuals together."
The Scottish government, SNP MPs and MSPs, Highland Council and the Moray Firth Partnership had been campaigning against the closure of the Fort George base after it emerged that the site formed part of a Ministry of Defence review of the UK's defence estate, along with Kinloss.
Fort George is managed by the Ministry of Defence and Scottish government agency, Historic Environment Scotland.
Large parts of the historic site are open to the public and more than 55,000 visitors take tours of the fortification every year.
The role of Fort George has been examined in previous rounds of defence cuts, including in 2011.
Fort George was built on the southern shores of the Inner Moray Firth on the orders of King George II following the Battle of Culloden in 1746.
It was a symbol of the Crown and was given the resources to crack down on fresh Jacobite rebellions, or risings.
Fort George would go on to provide a base for armed forces personnel training for D-Day landings during World War Two.
Today, the fort remains a working barracks and also houses the museum collections of the Seaforth Highlanders, The Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders and the Queen's Own Highlanders (Seaforth and Camerons).
RAF Kinloss was home to Nimrod surveillance aircraft before all of those stationed there were retired in 2010 and new planes were scrapped.
The site closed as an air station in 2012 and the Army now occupies the former air station.
RAF personnel and jet aircraft continue to operate from nearby RAF Lossiemouth. | Eight military sites in Scotland will close in the next 16 years, cutting the defence estate by 20%, the UK defence secretary has announced. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Sharapova, 30, withdraw before her second-round match against Ukraine's Lesia Tsurenko. The Russian will also miss next week's Rogers Cup in Toronto.
She beat Jennifer Brady on Monday, having been out since May with a thigh problem.
Muguruza thrashed Kayla Day 6-2 6-0.
It was the world number four's return to action in California following her second major triumph at Wimbledon three weeks ago.
"[Wimbledon] is just another tournament," said the Spaniard.
"I know it might sound weird - because of course winning it gives me confidence - but it doesn't mean that I'm going to come here and because I just won Wimbledon I think it's going to be easier to win matches. It's not at all.
"I'm just working on trying to forget what happened and just starting Stanford. Stanford is my goal, and that's it."
Sharapova is ranked 171st after returning to tennis in April following a 15-month doping ban.
The five-time Grand Slam champion played eight matches on clay before injury forced her out of the grass-court season.
She was given a wildcard to play in the US for the first time since March 2015 at Stanford, and will require another wildcard to make the main draw at the US Open, which starts on 28 August.
"Toward the end of the Monday night's match, I felt pain in my left forearm," said Sharapova.
"After yesterday's scan, the doctor has recommended I don't risk further injury."
Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC leases Tulloch Caledonian Stadium from Tulloch Homes, which built the ground at a cost of more than £6m.
The stadium was constructed in stages in 2001, 2004 and 2005.
Tulloch Homes has offered to give the stadium to Inverness. The club's board is due to meet to discuss the offer.
When ICTFC was promoted to the top flight in Scottish football the club first played its matches at Aberdeen FC's Pittodrie Stadium because its own ground did not meet required criteria.
Inverness Caley Thistle chairman Kenny Cameron said the construction of the second and third stands to comply with rules "utterly transformed the club's fortunes".
He said: "I will be discussing this incredibly generous offer with my fellow board members over the next few days and fully anticipate a speedy completion."
George Fraser, chief executive of Tulloch Homes and a former chairman of Inverness, said: "Inverness Caley Thistle is a true community club and at Tulloch Homes, as the largest local housebuilder, we consider ourselves an important member of the Inverness community.
"As every Inverness Caley Thistle fan knows, Tulloch Construction built the north and south stands in just 47 days, bringing the current capacity to 7,500.
"That was over a decade ago and when we completed the work we always hoped to one day be in a position where we could offer the stands to the club, enabling them to assume ownership and to safeguard the club's future." | Maria Sharapova pulled out of the Stanford Bank of the West Classic with an arm injury, while Garbine Muguruza impressed in her first match since winning Wimbledon last month.
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A construction company has offered to hand over control of a football stadium to the Scottish Premiership club that calls it home. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Mr Justice Treacy ruled it was wrong to impose a disqualifying hurdle on Denise Brewster.
He said: "It made no sense for the deceased to wish disentitlement upon the woman to whom he was engaged."
Ms Brewster challenged a refusal to pay her a pension following the death of her partner, William Leonard McMullan.
The couple had lived together for 10 years when Mr McMullan died suddenly in December 2009.
At the time of his death he had worked for Translink for 15 years, paying into an occupational pension scheme administered by the Northern Ireland Local Government Officers' Superannuation Committee (NILGOSC).
Earlier in 2009 co-habiting partners became eligible for survivor's allowances for the first time if they have been nominated.
Although half of a £68,000 death grant was paid out to Ms Brewster, NILGOSC declined to award her a pension, claiming it had no discretion under the relevant local lovernment pension scheme regulations.
Lawyers for Ms Brewster argued that the decision breached her human rights and discriminated against her on the basis of unmarried status.
They claimed that co-habiting partners are treated less favourably than married partners due to requirement placed on them to make a nomination.
Mr Justice Treacy pointed out that the aim of this part of the scheme was to put unmarried, stable, long-term partners in a similar position to married couples and those in a civil partnership, entitling them to a pension without discrimination on the grounds of status.
"The unusual feature of this case is that the means, i.e. the requirement for nomination, appear to be inconsistent with the legitimate aim," he said.
The judge also noted that if an allowance is not awarded to Ms Brewster, the payments made by Mr McMullan will be lost to them and may be used for the overall benefit of other contributors.
"It surely could not have been his desire to swell the pension fund for the benefit of mere strangers," he said.
Granting the judicial review application, Mr Justice Treacy ruled: "It is irrational and disproportionate to impose a disqualifying hurdle of this kind on the applicant who was indisputably in a qualifying relationship in that it fulfilled the substantive conditions.
"In this case the means defeated the aim."
A further hearing to decide on remedies will take place later this month. | An unmarried woman denied a survivor's pension because she was not nominated by her long-term partner suffered irrational treatment, a judge has said. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | The disturbance broke out at Liverpool's Titanic Hotel during Friday night's event, which was hosted by mayor Joe Anderson.
The group, who broke a window and kicked doors, are understood to have been protesting against Mr Anderson.
A spokeswoman for Love Activists said they regretted any upset caused.
Stuart Fergus, married to James's mother Denise, called the protestors "vile".
Mr Fergus said one member of the group used a rolled-up banner bearing James's image as a battering ram during the incident.
The toddler's mother was left in tears as about 40 protestors from the group were moved away from the building by security staff.
Mr Fergus said: "We heard them say 'get Joe out' and that was when we realised what it was all about.
"But this wasn't a political night. There was nothing political about it at all, so we are surprised.
"Denise adores the people of Merseyside, who have always stood by her and helped her in James's name.
"But to have a small group of people behave like this...whatever they say they were doing, they must have known what the event was for."
Merseyside Police said about 12 members of the group managed to enter the reception area of the hotel, causing damage to "a number of items".
A spokeswoman for Love Activists said the protest was peaceful and claimed members of the group were assaulted by security staff.
"As far as we are concerned, both prior to the event and at the event itself, there was no indication that the event was anything to do with James Bulger," she said.
"Of course we would not want to offend the name of James Bulger."
Asked if the group would like to apologise to the toddler's family, the spokeswoman said: "We regret any upset caused." | The family of murdered toddler James Bulger have condemned protesters who broke into a hotel during a charity dinner in memory of the youngster. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | It comes after Port Adelaide Power's Paddy Ryder and Adelaide Crows player Eddie Betts were racially abused during a match at Adelaide Oval on Saturday.
In the letter, the AFL players' indigenous advisory board said it had "had enough".
"Racial vilification has been a part of our game for too long," it added.
"That both Eddie and Patrick were abused because of the colour of their skin is absolutely unacceptable."
The latest incident follows a Port Adelaide Power member being banned after she was filmed throwing a banana at Betts last year.
"These are more than just words and the impact these slurs have on the player, their family, their children and their community is profound," continued the statement.
"There's no room in our game for any form of vilification, whether it's based on race, gender, religion or sexual orientation.
"Anyone who thinks that this is an acceptable way to act is no football fan." | Aboriginal players from Australian rules football's AFL have written an open letter to the sport's fans calling for an end to racial abuse. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | In an interview with the Reuters news agency, Mr Fico said Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia would be uncompromising in negotiations.
His comments come a day after the EU's first major meeting without the UK.
Brexit, though not formally discussed, overshadowed the Bratislava summit.
At an end of the summit on Friday, Mr Fico said that he and other Central European leaders whose citizens make up much of the EU migrant population in Britain would not let those people become "second class citizens".
But in the interview with Reuters news agency on Saturday, he went further.
"V4 [Visegrad group] countries will be uncompromising," he said. "Unless we feel a guarantee that these people are equal, we will veto any agreement between the EU and Britain."
However, a Slovak foreign ministry source told the BBC Mr Fico had been referring only to those EU citizens living in the UK at the time of the referendum.
The Czech ambassador to the UK, Libor Secka, pointed out this was not an "official statement" of the Visegrad countries' common position on their approach to Brexit negotiations.
He said that while he respected Mr Fico's opinion, it was for Poland - which holds the Visegrad presidency - to speak on behalf of the group.
"We are not going to provide a running commentary on these negotiations," said a British government spokesman when contacted by the BBC. "That approach won't help us get the best deal for Britain."
All the EU leaders have insisted there will be no formal Brexit talks until Britain triggers the two-year divorce process and says what it wants.
European Council President Donald Tusk, said the British Prime Minister Theresa May had recently told him that might be in January or February 2017.
The Bratislava summit was intended as a discussion about the best way forward, following Britain's vote to leave the bloc.
In particular, leaders tried to find common ground on the best way to deal with the numbers of migrants coming into Europe, and how to deal with the after effects of several years of economic crisis.
The Visegrad group has consistently opposed EU efforts to introduce mandatory quotas for migrants.
But in the interview, Mr Fico said the EU had shifted from a debate over mandatory quotas to a new principle of "flexible solidarity" over the migrant crisis.
He said he did not get everything he wanted, but he was happy that a debate had begun on flexible solidarity, allowing countries to offer what they can to tackle the migrant crisis.
A note on terminology: The BBC uses the term migrant to refer to all people on the move who have yet to complete the legal process of claiming asylum. This group includes people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria, who are likely to be granted refugee status, as well as people who are seeking jobs and better lives, who governments are likely to rule are economic migrants. | A group of Central European EU members known as the Visegrad Four is ready to veto any Brexit deal that would limit people's right to work in the UK, Slovakian PM Robert Fico says. |
Summarize the information given below. | Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru have already made such a pledge, for 48 weeks and 39 weeks a year respectively.
Shadow Education Minister Angela Burns said it would help parents return to work and boost the economy.
The Tories did not say how many weeks of the year their pledge covered. The Lib Dems have yet to reveal a plan.
"It is currently very difficult for working parents to take advantage of just 10 hours of free childcare, especially as provision frequently has to spread over five days," Ms Burns said.
"Welsh Conservatives will work towards trebling free childcare for working parents to help parents return to work so they can provide for their family and help deliver a stronger economy."
The Tories claimed Wales risked falling behind England, where the UK government has promised to double free childcare for parents of three and four-year-olds from 15 to 30 hours a week.
They are currently allowed 570 hours of free early education or childcare per year, usually taken as 15 hours a week for 38 weeks.
Prime Minister David Cameron has said the promise to double it - originally due to take effect in 2015 - would now be fully implemented by 2017.
However, a report for the Welsh government in February said increasing free childcare would make little difference in terms of reducing poverty or getting more women into work.
The Welsh Liberal Democrats said they planned to unveil their childcare policies later in March.
A UKIP spokeswoman said: "We support extending free childcare, if it can be paid for, but the problem is lack of availability in Wales.
"Fewer free hours are available and largely only in schools and often during term-time.
"We would increase the supply of childcare by allowing child minders to work without needing to get regulatory approval."
Meanwhile, a survey of childcare providers in Wales suggests many are struggling due to increasing costs and fewer children taking up places.
Nearly a quarter of those responding to the National Day Nurseries Association (NDNA)'s annual survey said they had very little confidence about the future of their business.
NDNA chief executive Purnima Tanuku said the new National Living Wage would increase staff costs by 13% this year and 35% by 2019.
"This, coupled with chronic underfunding for free places and declining numbers of children attending, is causing real problems," she said.
The survey included 115 respondents from Wales, representing nearly a fifth of full day care providers here. | The Conservatives are the latest party in Wales to promise to treble free childcare from 10 to 30 hours a week if they win the assembly election. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Thomas Gill, whom police said was 28 and lived on Baldmoor Lake Road in Birmingham, was jailed for 16 months for being in breach of a court order.
Judge Carmel Wall said he had been ordered not to harass the woman and ruled he was in contempt of court.
The judge said the city council took legal action against Gill.
Updates on this story and more from Birmingham
He also indicated the woman had lived in Sutton Coldfield.
Gill had left the bag of tricks at her home shortly before Christmas.
The judge concluded the stunt was one of seven breaches of an injunction.
Gill had also shouted at the woman, threatened violence, damaged property and pestered her on Facebook, said the judge.
Detail has emerged in a written ruling by the judge following a hearing at Birmingham County Court.
It briefly hit a rate of 14 to the dollar amid concerns about the strength of the Chinese economy, reports the Reuters news agency.
Economies that rely on the sale of commodities - such as South Africa's - have been hit by the slowdown in growth in China, a major source of demand.
The problem was compounded when China unexpectedly devalued its currency earlier this month.
The rand is particularly vulnerable because it is one of the globe's most highly traded emerging market currencies, South African economist Martyn Davies told the BBC.
He added that South Africa's central bank will find it hard to defend the currency against a slide in value, instead the government needs to address some of the fundamental economic issues such as the problems in the power sector.
China is South Africa's number one trading partner and a weakening of the Chinese economy will affect the demand for South African goods.
So, the immediate future is not promising.
While other countries have also been affected by the China slowdown, the situation in South Africa has been made worse by the general state of the domestic economy.
In the past year South Africa's economy has struggled to raise growth above 2%.
One factor is the continued labour unrest leading to regular strikes in key areas such as mining.
Another is the electricity shortages due to poor maintenance of the national grid.
For South Africa, there will be a need for deeper evaluation, even after global markets show signs of recovery.
Several other African currencies have been under pressure in recent weeks over fears of a Chinese economic slowdown.
With oil currently hovering around $40 (£25) a barrel, there are concerns about the prospects for oil-based economies, especially Nigeria and Angola.
The relative strength of the US dollar has also had an effect on - among others - the Zambian kwacha and the Ugandan shilling, which have both hit record lows in the past week. | A man who left a bag filled with a magic set, an Xbox and a Dictaphone containing an abusive message recording at a woman's home has been jailed.
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South Africa's currency has fallen to an all-time low against the US dollar. |
What is the summary of the following article? | Firefighters were called at 14:43 GMT on Monday to a chemical fire at the Hazardous Waste Transfer Station in the Ewelme area near Wallingford.
Hydrogen gas was produced after water was used to cool the chemical contents of a skip fire before Oxfordshire Fire and Rescue Service arrived.
Six people were treated by paramedics at the scene.
Station manager Marcus Reay said: "This was an unusual incident as most people expect that if you apply water to something hot it will cool it down.
"This is not always the case, especially when chemicals or liquids are involved.
"I'd like to remind business owners to check their inventory and to make sure they know the chemicals and products they use and store." | Six people needed treatment after chemical fumes were released during a fire at an Oxfordshire waste centre. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | The Financial Times reports the deal is worth $250m (£174m).
SwiftKey is known for its predictive keyboard, which can be found installed on millions of smartphone devices.
The company said it was a "milestone" in its history.
"Our mission is to enhance interaction between people and technology. We think these are a perfect match, and we believe joining Microsoft is the right next stage in our journey," said SwiftKey's founders Jon Reynolds and Ben Medlock in a blog post.
The company, started by the Cambridge University graduates in 2008, is the latest UK artificial intelligence (AI) firm to be bought up by a US tech giant.
DeepMind was bought by Google in 2014, for £400m. Another firm, VocalIQ, was bought recently by Apple.
As well as the popular smartphone app, SwiftKey is known for being behind the computer software on Prof Stephen Hawking's wheelchair.
The deal furthers Microsoft's new mobile strategy, spearheaded by chief executive Satya Nadella.
Instead of focusing on hardware - where the company has a tiny share of the market with its Windows Phone range - the firm is now looking to build up a range of productivity software to be used on any kind of device.
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Erwyd le Fol (also known as Russell Erwood), 34, took part in a naming ceremony in the towns' square.
The occasion was marked with a birds of prey demonstration, medieval games and a parade.
Paid for by the town's chamber of trade, he will attend functions wearing a hat with donkey ears.
Speaking after the ceremony Mr le Fol said: "It's amazing. It's phenomenal. To be the first jester of a town in 700 years feels unreal."
Kristopher Jane, 31, from Bristol, assaulted the child while being filmed by a 17-year-old girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
The teenager, from Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, was sentenced alongside Jane at Cambridge Crown Court to four years' detention.
Judge David Farrell branded Jane a "dangerous and sickening paedophile".
The pair had admitted a string of sex charges at an earlier hearing at Peterborough Crown Court.
Footage of the assault, found on Jane's phone by police, was called "appalling and depraved" by the judge.
The video showed the toddler crying and trying to push Jane's hand away.
Jane admitted 12 offences, including sexual activity with a 14-year-old girl and sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl.
The 17-year-old co-defendant admitted six offences.
Judge Farrell told her: "You knew full well what you were doing was wrong, and very wrong."
The pair were both handed sexual harm prevention orders. | UK-based artificial intelligence firm SwiftKey has been acquired by Microsoft, the company has confirmed.
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Conwy's first jester-in-residence since the 13th Century has been unveiled at a ceremony in the town.
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A paedophile who sexually abused a toddler in the back of a van has been jailed for 22 years. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | The bird was first spotted in Earlham Road in Norwich on 17 June and reported to Kevin Murphy, who runs the voluntary Norfolk Wildlife Rescue.
He has tried to coax it from a tree using birdcalls to save it from being attacked, but it ended up on a rooftop.
The peahen escaped again and he is now awaiting more sightings.
More news on the loose in Norfolk
Mr Murphy said he was contacted by a member of the public who saw the bird on Hingham street "with youths attacking it with metal poles".
"By the time I got there the youths and bird had gone," he added.
The bird has been spotted wandering around a water company site and even popped in to an office, but has always disappeared by the time Mr Murphy arrives.
Mr Murphy began chasing the peahen, which is a female peafowl and mates with the more flamboyant peacock, after seeing reports of sightings on social media.
"I don't know for sure where it has escaped from, but I do know that walking around the streets of Norwich isn't the best place for it," he added.
Mr Murphy has been involved in helping to rescue animals, including foxes, badgers, otters, seals and stoats, for about 20 years. | A wildlife rescuer is searching for an elusive peahen which has evaded all attempts at capture for almost two weeks. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Passers-by found the hot weather casualties at Goose Green in Ashill, Norfolk, on Wednesday.
Staff at the RSPCA centre at East Winch loosened the tar with butter before bathing the birds in washing-up liquid and warm water.
Manager Alison Charles said: "Butter is an old fashioned remedy for removing tar and it really works.
"The weather was so hot yesterday that the road suface was melting.
"All five ducklings were so poorly when they came in we weren't sure they were going to make it."
However, after treatment they are now "eating, drinking and chirping away in our orphans' room," Ms Charles added. | Five ducklings discovered "stuck fast" to melting asphalt are recovering after rescuers used butter to free them. |
Write a summary for this information. | Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust agreed to balance its books after a critical report by NHS watchdog Monitor.
The trust was put in special measures over a predicted deficit of £9.4m for the year 2015/16.
Chief executive Michael Scott said savings would be made while maintaining the quality of patient services.
The trust breached its licence by predicting the £9.4m deficit and not having an adequate recovery plan.
Enforcement action by Monitor since February included special measures to improve patient services.
An improvement director was appointed and the trust was partnered with Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.
Laura Mills from Monitor said: "These steps should enable the trust to balance its books and ensure patients are able to receive quality services."
Mr Scott called the trust's plan "robust" and said £44m of savings had already been achieved over the past four years.
"The focus for us is not only on balancing the books; it is on balancing cost savings against maintaining safe and high quality services.
"We are doing this over a longer period to protect our staff and our service users from further cuts."
The trust has spent £2.6m recruiting more staff for inpatient units and £950,000 for additional community workers.
"We do all of this in the face of chronic under-funding of mental health services, and these life-saving services remain the 'Cinderella' of the NHS.
"We are determined to continue to campaign for increased funding," he said. | The NHS trust providing mental health services in Norfolk and Suffolk is to make savings of £36m over four years. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | The 36-year-old from Eastbourne uploaded two sexually explicit pictures of his ex-partner and non-sexual images of three women with offensive captions.
He was arrested and cautioned in April after the victims contacted Sussex Police.
The force decided to review the case following criticism but has concluded the decision to caution was "correct".
Supt Nick May said: "These incidents have generated a lot of public interest as to whether or not the police made the correct decision.
"I fully understand the concern and upset it has caused, and apologise for this, especially to the young women involved.
"We understand that such offences make victims feel very vulnerable so making a decision like this isn't easy."
He said he had personally spoken to the victims and reassured them that their concerns were taken seriously.
He added: "We have gone back and painstakingly reviewed the evidence available... and taking everything into account that we knew at the time, our decision to caution for the offences disclosed was a correct decision in the circumstances."
He said decisions to caution are "often complex" and the final decision is a subjective one but he said lessons had been learnt from the case.
Revenge porn became an offence in April 2015 and refers to the act of a partner or ex-partner purposefully distributing sexual images or videos without the other person's consent.
Police said the man, who has not been named, has "made full admissions and expressed remorse".
But a victim's mother, Eastbourne MP Caroline Ansell and Polly Neate, boss of charity Woman's Aid criticised the force for issuing a caution.
Peng Chang-kuei succumbed to pneumonia in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan.
Mr Peng's demise comes in the same week as that of Michael "Jim" Delligatti, father of the McDonald's Big Mac, who was also 98.
He leaves the world his sweet-but-spicy chicken recipe - named after a 19th Century military leader from China's Hunan province.
Mr Peng began his food training aged 13, and rose to become the banquet chef for China's Nationalist government.
In 1949, he fled to Taiwan when the Nationalist forces were defeated in the Chinese Civil War.
According to legend, General Tso's Chicken was named in 1952, when Mr Peng was cooking for a visiting US Navy Admiral, Arthur Radford.
Low on inspiration, he fried some chunks of chicken and added sauces and seasoning in a bid to create something new.
The admiral loved the result. When he asked the name of the dish, Mr Peng christened it on the spot: "General Tso's Chicken".
The real-life figure behind the name is Gen Zuo Zongtang - a revered 19th Century military man from Hunan.
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Mr Peng moved to New York in 1973, and opened a Chinese restaurant. His fan base quickly grew, and reportedly included one Henry Kissinger, then US Secretary of State.
While General Tso's is best known as American Chinese food, its fame has seen some Hunanese chefs embrace the recipe.
Mr Peng ultimately returned to Taiwan, where he founded the successful chain eatery Peng's Garden Hunan Restaurant.
56 year old Dussuyer has signed a two-year deal with the option to extend the contract.
He was on a final shortlist of two names along with compatriot Frederic Antonetti, after a third shortlisted candidate - Poland's Henry Kasperczak - withdrew to take over the vacant Tunisia coaching position.
Dussuyer replaces Herve Renard who won the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations with Ivory Coast in Equatorial Guinea in February.
Renard resigned as coach of The Elephants to become a club coach with French side Lille.
Dussuyer has considerable experience of coaching in Africa.
He had three stints as coach of Guinea, and most recently took the Syli Nationale to the quarter-finals of the 2015 Nations Cup, where they eventually lost to runners-up Ghana.
He also coached Benin between 2008 and 2010 and before that, he worked as an assistant to Henri Michel with Ivory Coast.
His first competitive match in charge of Ivory Coast will be their 2017 Nations Cup qualifier against Sierra Leone in September. | The decision to caution a man who posted revenge porn images online was correct, a police force has said.
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The chef who created the much-loved Chinese dish General Tso's Chicken has died at the age of 98.
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Frenchman Michel Dussuyer has been appointed as the new coach of African champions Ivory Coast, according to the country's football federation (FIF). |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | More than 7,000 people have been rescued so far, but many are still stranded, reports say.
PM Narendra Modi, who travelled to Chennai, has promised $150m (£99m) to the flood-hit Tamil Nadu state.
More than 260 people have died in the floods in the state after the heaviest rainfall in a century.
A depression in the Bay of Bengal has triggered rains in coastal areas.
Last month, non-stop rain for nearly a week brought the city to a standstill.
Three days of fresh rains have again led to massive flooding, inundating homes, hospitals, roads, railway tracks and the city's airport. Forecasts of more showers remain in place.
In pictures: Chennai flooding
Schools, colleges and factories are shut, exams postponed and power supply suspended in most parts of the city. An oil refinery has stopped operations.
Reports say there has been no rain in Chennai on Friday morning and water levels are receding in some parts of the city.
A naval air base at Arakkonam, 70km (43 miles) from the Tamil Nadu state capital, is now being used as a makeshift airport with seven commercial flights expected to operate on Friday and Saturday.
Train services will remain suspended until Saturday, officials say.
At the scene - Sanjoy Majumder, BBC News, Chennai
It hasn't rained in Chennai for 24 hours and with the sun out, the water levels have begun dipping in many parts of the city.
Some areas are still badly affected and remain cut off. Rescue teams are now focussing on these neighbourhoods while trying to get food and medicines to thousands of people who have been affected.
Shops and markets have opened as well and people are queuing up to buy food and fuel, although there are shortages of essentials supplies such as milk.
But the airport and the main railway station are still closed - a naval air base outside the city has been cleared for a limited number of civilian flights.
Although the rain is part of the normal monsoon, Chennai received as much rain in two days as it does in a couple of months.
A massive rescue operation is continuing to reach stranded people. Some 5,000 houses are still under water with many people trapped inside them, reports say.
Troops have set up 25 shelters and community kitchens for the flood victims.
Officials said they were investigating the deaths of 14 patients on life support after a power failure at a private hospital in the city.
"The hospital was flooded and it was adjacent to the river. The patients have died over a period of three days. 57 other patients who were also on ventilator support have been shifted to other hospitals in the city,'' Tamil Nadu health official J Radhakrishnan told the BBC Hindi.
"The deaths have definitely not occurred due to power cuts. They were all critical patients. This will in any case be a matter of investigation," he said.
Seema Agarwal, a resident, said she had seen many people queuing at bus stops to leave the city.
"There are people who haven't eaten for days. They have seen their possessions float away from the house. Food, clothes - all gone," she told the Reuters news agency.
The federal weather office has predicted two more days of torrential rain in the southern state, where nearly 70 million people live.
A total of 269 people are now known to have died in floods in Tamil Nadu state since last month. | Floodwaters have started receding from parts of the southern Indian city of Chennai (Madras), hours after it experienced a respite from rain. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | Varnish, recently dropped from the GB team after missing out on the 2016 Olympics, said in the Daily Mail that British Cycling chief Shane Sutton told her to "go have a baby".
Sutton, 58, has denied any wrongdoing.
British Cycling said it wanted to give Varnish, 25, the chance to discuss her concerns in full.
"We are fully committed to the principles and active promotion of equality of opportunity," read a statement from the governing body.
"As such, we treat any such allegations with the utmost seriousness."
Australian Sutton added: "I wholeheartedly deny that I said or did anything other than act with complete professionalism in my dealings with Jess."
Varnish claimed in the Daily Mail interview that when she questioned the decision to drop her she was told that she was "too old". She also alleges that she had to listen to a "long list" of comments about her figure.
"I was told that 'with an ass like mine I couldn't change position within the team sprint'," Varnish said.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Varnish, a world, European and Commonwealth Games medal-winner, missed out on a place in Rio after she and Katy Marchant finished fifth at last month's World Championships.
Afterwards she appeared to criticise decisions made by British Cycling, telling BBC Sport the team "had been playing catch-up for two years after decisions that were [made] above us".
Sutton said the decision not to renew her contract "was based on a projection of medal competitiveness at Olympic level".
Bertrand Traore scored for Ajax in their 2-1 win at nine-man Panathinaikos in a game that saw three red cards.
Baba Rahman grabbed the only goal in Schalke's victory at Nice, for whom ex-Liverpool striker Mario Balotelli failed to add to his two debut goals.
Frank de Boer's Inter Milan - in Southampton's Group K - lost 2-0 at home to Hapoel Be'er Sheva.
Inter, who have won the European Cup and Uefa Cup three times each, have picked up four points from their opening three games in Serie A since De Boer replaced Roberto Mancini.
Hapoel Be'er Sheva were knocked out of the Champions League by Celtic at the play-off stage earlier this season.
Zenit St Petersburg pulled off one of the Europa League's great comebacks when they came back from 3-0 down at Maccabi Tel-Aviv to win 4-3, with three of their goals coming in the last six minutes. They are in Group D with Dundalk.
Jan Sykora scored the fastest goal in Europa League history - after 10.69 seconds - for Slovan Liberec at Qarabag. They ended up drawing 2-2, with Milan Baros, who played for Liverpool, Aston Villa and Portsmouth, scoring their other goal.
In Manchester United's Group A, Simon Kjaer scored in the sixth minute of stoppage time for the visitors as Fenerbahce drew 1-1 at Zorya Luhansk.
Alexandre Pato, who had a loan spell at Chelsea last season, scored in Villarreal's 2-1 win over FC Zurich. Facundo Ferreyra, who never played a single minute for Newcastle in a disastrous 2014-15 loan spell, scored Shakhtar Donetsk's goal in a 1-0 win at Konyaspor.
Former Manchester United striker Giuseppe Rossi netted for Celta Vigo in their 1-1 draw at Standard Liege.
Italian minnows Sassuolo, in their first European campaign, thrashed Athletic Bilbao 3-0, while Roma drew 1-1 at Viktoria Plzen. | British Cycling will contact Jess Varnish about claims by the sprinter that she was the subject of sexist comments by the technical director.
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Two Chelsea loanees were among the scorers in the opening fixtures of the Europa League group stage. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Pte Shaun Cole, 22, from Edinburgh, was attending the Ultra Music festival in Miami with two friends.
Local media has reported that he died as a result of a head injury and his body was found on a pavement. He was serving with the Royal Scots Borderers.
Pte Cole's family described him as "an extremely popular young man" with "a flair for life". They said his life has been "taken from him too soon".
In a statement, released by the Army, his family said: "It comes with such regret that we have had to say goodbye to an amazing son, brother, grandson, nephew and friend.
"An extremely popular young man, he had a flair for life and was always the life and soul of everyone he was around. He was an incredible young man who had his life taken from him too soon. We ask everyone to respect our privacy to grieve. "
Police in America said the former Tynecastle High School pupil had a blunt force trauma to the head, and they were still trying to establish whether his death was an accident or murder.
Pte Cole had recently returned from serving in Sierra Leone, where he was helping with the fight against Ebola.
Commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Matt Munro said Pte Cole would be "missed terribly".
He said: "The men and women of 1 SCOTS are shocked and deeply saddened to hear of the death of Private Shaun Cole."
"Only recently back from helping to battle the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone and a veteran of the conflict in Afghanistan, Shaun achieved an extraordinary amount in a military career that was full of promise but was tragically cut short. We will miss him terribly.
"Our heartfelt thoughts and prayers are with Shaun's family at this desperately difficult time."
Tom Rae, head teacher at Tynecastle High School, said: "Shaun is remembered fondly as a helpful, pleasant and hard-working student.
"He had a good sense of humour and was popular with his peers, the staff and was a real team player."
Jamie Lothian, who is understood to have been on the music festival trip with Mr Cole, wrote on Facebook from Fort Lauderdale: "It is killing me inside to write this but I still can't get my head around any of it.
"I've not only lost one of my best friends but a brother and there is not a moment for the rest of my life that I'll never stop thinking about you bro! Thanks everyone for the support."
David Edmonds has stepped down two days after London Mayor Sadiq Khan ordered a "detailed investigation" into the cost of West Ham's new home.
The outlay to modify the stadium has risen from £272m to £323m.
Edmonds was appointed chairman of the LLDC in September 2015.
He has been a board member of the Olympic Park Legacy Company and its successor, the LLDC, since 2010.
Edmonds chaired the investment committee, and was the first chair of E20 LLP, the joint venture between LLDC and the London Borough of Newham, owners of the Olympic Stadium.
"David has made an enormous contribution to the legacy of the London 2012 Games and he has helped to steer the organisation through some extremely challenging issues," said David Goldstone, chief executive of the LLDC.
Campaigners have welcomed the investigation into the £50m rise in costs.
Part of the reason for the increase is a rise in the cost of installing and operating the retractable seating, which can be removed for concerts and athletics events.
The cost of £8m a year is up from an estimated £300,000 because the company originally contracted for the job had gone bust, reports BBC sports editor Dan Roan.
Stadium operators LLDC and the London taxpayer will need to pick up the additional costs.
Premier League club West Ham contribute £2.5m-a-year rent, plus the one-off £15m for the conversion.
West Ham won the bid to occupy the Olympic Stadium in March 2013, and played their first game there in August 2016, after 112 years at Upton Park.
However, their move has been marred by fan violence, leading the club to issue a five-point security plan to prevent further disorder.
In addition, police will be helping stewards to segregate fans inside the ground at West Ham's match against Stoke City this weekend - the first time this has been done at the stadium. | A Scottish soldier has died while on holiday in Florida.
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The chairman of Olympic Stadium operators the London Legacy Development Corporation has resigned amid the row over the escalating cost of converting the venue into a football ground. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Gareth Hindmarsh told officers he was sitting drinking lager when the decision to kill Linda Norcup "just popped into my head".
The 35-year-old had previously pleaded guilty to murder, Stafford Crown Court heard.
Hindmarsh, of Stoke-on-Trent, will be sentenced on 6 November when he faces a mandatory life term.
The siblings had been drinking together at Ms Norcup's flat in Beckett Avenue, in Meir, on the evening of 24 June, the court heard.
Hindmarsh walked back to his own home in Tawney Crescent, and the 46-year-old mother-of-one went to bed.
Prosecutors claimed Hindmarsh left the door unlocked and went back to kill his sister at about midnight.
He strangled her in bed and then went home.
Hindmarsh then went back to the flat in the early hours of 25 June where he found signs of life in his sister.
He used a different ligature to kill her, before putting her body in the bath with her head partially under water.
Hindmarsh went home but returned a third time, when he called an ambulance pretending he had found his sister dead in the bath.
Paramedics spotted ligature marks on Ms Norcup's neck and phoned the police.
Debbie Gould, prosecuting said: "While his sister is not said to have regained consciousness, she certainly did not die immediately on that account.
"And some little time passed when she was severely incapacitated, and he went back - we say in the common parlance - to finish her off." | A man who strangled his sister as she slept then returned later to "finish her off", a court heard. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | The 28-year-old has one year left on his deal at the Emirates.
However, it has been reported that Sanchez has said he wants to join Arsenal's Premier League rivals Manchester City.
Asked whether Sanchez had told him that he wanted to leave the club, the Frenchman said: "No."
Wenger added: "The players have contracts and we expect them to respect their contracts. That's what we want."
Sanchez joined Arsenal from Barcelona for about £35m in the summer of 2014.
Wenger, who is in Australia with the Arsenal squad for a pre-season tour, also spoke of his admiration for Monaco forward Kylian Mbappe.
The 18-year-old has been the subject of transfer speculation after a stunning breakthrough season in which he scored 29 goals in 31 starts last term.
"He's a player who, when he gets up in the morning, can chose where he wants to go," said Wenger.
"There are not many players with that kind of luck because he's 18 years of age and all of Europe has a red carpet open for him.
"Nobody can say he is not interested in a player of that calibre, all the clubs are interested in him." | Alexis Sanchez has not told Arsene Wenger he wants to leave the club, says the Gunners boss who "expects" the Chile striker to see out his contract. |
Write a summary of this document. | The 21-year-old was seriously injured when his Honda CB600 motorbike was involved in a collision with a Renault Clio and a Metrocab in Lambhill on Thursday.
He died later at Glasgow Royal Infirmary.
Police have appealed for information from witnesses to the crash, which happened on Balmore Road, near Skirsa Street, at 17:20 on Thursdsay.
PC Adnan Alam said: "I am keen to speak to anyone who witnessed the crash, or may have seen the motorcyclist driving in the area before the crash took place. | A man has died following a three-vehicle crash in Glasgow. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Scotland went down 27-22 on Saturday to the impressive hosts as they failed to build on the momentum of the thrilling victory over Australia in Sydney.
"I touched the ball three or four times," said Grigg, 24.
"I enjoy running with the ball so I would like to have got a bit more ball but it turned into quite a messy game."
Scotland captain John Barclay said the wet conditions in Fiji meant the ball was "like a bar of soap" and he highlighted a range of areas where the team did not perform well enough - in turnovers, in conceding penalties, a lack of accuracy and poor passing.
"Fiji came out firing and physicality won the game," Grigg told BBC Scotland.
"There were a few big tackles, a few big hits. It took me back to club rugby days in Wellington when there would be a few big hits and people on the sidelines would be whooping and cheering.
"They surprised us with their kicking game. They kicked a lot more than we expected them to.
"We didn't get into our phase attack; our structure went out the window. We had a couple of phases and then we'd lose the ball or they'd send numbers into the rucks and we'd lose the ball that way.
"We weren't able to get into our rhythm and we weren't able to play our shape. We're a team that likes to play quick ball and we weren't able to achieve that."
The New Zealand-born Glasgow Warriors centre, who qualifies for Scotland through his Ayrshire grandfather, admitted to "good nerves" in the team hotel ahead of winning his first Scotland cap.
And he said of his debut: "I thought it was amazing. Ever since I was a child I've wanted to play international rugby and I couldn't ask for a better team and management."
The 38-year-old missed out on the time he needed in the heats and final of the SM6 200m individual medley.
"It's out of my hands," said Kindred, who made his GB debut in 1994.
A total of 25 swimmers met the required standard over five days of competition, with the team to be named next month.
Paralympic champion Josef Craig was the last to join the list, setting a new British record in the S8 50m freestyle in the last session.
Former world champion Amy Marren and S9 50m freestyle pair Matt Wylie and Ryan Crouch achieved their required times earlier on Wednesday.
Kindred, who needed to swim two minutes 42.65 seconds to make the qualifying standard, clocked 2:42.88 in the heats and 2:43.20 in the final.
"That's the fastest time in the world so far this year," said the six-time Paralympic champion. "I felt pressure knowing my main event was on the last day and unfortunately it wasn't to be."
There was also pressure on Craig, who won gold in the S7 400m freestyle in London but was reclassified in 2014 into the S8 category for less-impaired swimmers.
Having missed out on a place at last year's World Championships, the 19-year-old showed great determination to clock 27.27 seconds, beating the 27.45 he needed.
"That swim is probably of greater importance to me than the one which won me gold in London," he said.
"I knew I had that sort of swim in the bag so it was fantastic to go and do it and shows I am still in the game."
National performance director Chris Furber believes the displays in Glasgow put the GB in a strong position before both the European Championships, which start on Monday in Madeira, and the Rio Paralympics.
"We set the qualifying standards high because we wanted a quality team in Rio," he said.
"We are delighted to have 25 swimmers achieve qualification times, plus a few others within 2% of the time, so we will have a strong team at the Paralympics." | Centre Nick Grigg said making his Scotland debut fulfilled a boyhood dream but he admitted he barely touched the ball in the loss to Fiji in Suva.
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Sascha Kindred must wait to see if he will compete at a sixth Paralympics after failing to make the qualifying standard on the final day of the British Para-Swimming trials. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Mr Jones accused the prime minister of "tinkering" around the edges.
"If we don't heed the lesson from Scotland we won't have a UK in years to come" he told Week In Week Out.
Meanwhile, an ICM Research/BBC poll found 60% in Wales would like to see policing devolved and 56% some welfare benefits.
Mr Jones spoke of his frustration at the UK Government wanting the issue of future powers across the UK being dealt with by a Cabinet sub-committee rather than a convention where all UK devolved governments were sat around a table.
"If they don't get this right in future - you can see the Scots coming back, being unhappy.
"In order to avoid all this and to keep UK together we need to have proper constitution for next centuries to come and work out where powers will be.
"If that isn't done my great fear will be that in 10 years time in Scotland we'll be back with another referendum and the result may well be different. That's the lesson the establishment need to learn."
The ICM poll commissioned by BBC Wales suggests support for the Welsh government to decide how much income tax is paid in Wales.
The survey found 46% in favour and 37% against the idea.
The first minister has insisted that the so-called underfunding of Wales needs to be addressed before income tax powers are devolved.
Wales receives money from Westminster relative to its population through the Barnett formula.
But politicians claim this is over-generous to Scotland and Wales receives £300m a year less than it should do.
Mr Jones has already called at the Labour conference for a "new UK" with the strong identities of its nations "recognised within a common bond of solidarity".
He said further devolution could not be solved by a "sticking plaster" approach.
On tax devolution, economist Gerry Holtham tells tonight's Week In Week Out programme he thinks that ministers in Cardiff Bay have been reluctant to embrace tax-raising powers because of "fear".
Mr Jones denied this saying there was no point taking on tax-raising powers before the funding has been sorted out.
In the poll, voters were also asked whether Welsh MPs should be prevented from voting at Westminster on matters that only effect England.
A total of 44% agreed but 41% disagreed - suggesting Prime Minister David Cameron's bid to introduce so-called English votes for English laws has divided opinion.
The same poll suggests support for Welsh independence has fallen to its lowest recorded level in the wake of the Scottish referendum.
ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1,006 Welsh adults aged 18 or over by telephone on 19-22nd September 2014. Interviews were conducted across Wales and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. ICM is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules.
There is more on this story on Week In Week Out on BBC One Wales at 22:35 BST on Wednesday 24 September.
The US Treasury Department urged lawmakers on Thursday to make a blueprint that would permit Puerto Rico to restructure its debt.
A plan would include more oversight over Puerto Rico's finances.
It includes Medicaid expansion and an expansion of low-income tax credits.
"Puerto Rico is out of cash and running out of options," said Antonio Weiss, a Treasury Department official, to the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which presides over Puerto Rico. "In the very near future, Puerto Rico will face impossible choices among providing essential services, delivering promised pension benefits and paying its debt."
The proposal is unlikely to be approved by the Republican-controlled Congress, which has opposed increased spending.
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a Democrat seeking the party's presidential nomination, called for a rescue plan that protects the island with 3.5 million residents and not just investors who purchased government bonds-on which Puerto Rico has defaulted.
"This is a human tragedy, and Wall Street should not be believing that they can get blood from a stone," he said.
In August the US territory failed to make a debt payment, saying it did not have the funds to pay more than $50m (£32m) due on bonds.
It is by far the most indebted territory or state per capita in the United States, and unemployment is at almost 14% - more than double the national average - and over the last decade there has been little or no growth, resulting in the economy teetering on the brink of collapse.
Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren said Department of Treasury officials should be as aggressive as they were in bailing out banks during the 2008 financial crisis in helping out Puerto Rico. | First Minister Carwyn Jones fears the break up of the UK within 10 years because of the UK Government's response to fall-out of the Scottish "No" vote.
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The Obama administration is urging Congress to devise a plan for Puerto Rico's massive $72 billion (£47 billion) debt in order to avoid a "humanitarian crisis". |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | The group, which includes many top universities, says changes to the funding system in England have meant students who wanted to go to a good university and had the right grades have not been able to.
Six out of its 24 members have spaces.
Higher Education Minister David Willetts says it is likely fewer people will go to university this year.
There is more of a market this year in student places and some Russell Group universities have never previously offered places through Clearing - the system which matches students to vacancies.
Universities in England have been able to expand by taking as many students with top grades (AAB or higher) as they can accommodate or if they are charging fees of less than £7,500, but their "core" number of places have been cut.
And fewer students than expected got the top grades.
Tuition fees rise to a maximum of £9,000 a year for many students around the UK this autumn, following the decision to raise fees in England's universities.
According to the Ucas Clearing website there are vacancies for courses beginning in the next two weeks at at least six out of the Russell Group's 24 universities, including Birmingham, Sheffield and Queen Mary's, University of London.
Dr Wendy Piatt, director general of the Russell Group, said: "If universities couldn't recruit enough high-calibre students they risked losing funding but if they recruited too many students with grades ABB or below they risked substantial fines.
"The difficult choices faced by admissions departments this year means students who wanted to attend a leading university and had the right qualifications have not been able to, even though those universities wanted to accept them."
At a conference yesterday, Mr Willetts acknowledged it was likely that fewer people would go to university this year, although it would still be a high figure.
The numbers getting AAB grades or equivalent were lower than expected he said - 80,000 rather than 85,000.
He said: "It looks as if there may have been fewer pupils achieving predicted AAB grades at A-level, but rather more getting top grades in equivalent high-class vocational qualifications, such as BTecs.
"Different institutions will have been affected differently; that is inevitable when making significant changes, which are intended to take greater account of student choice.
"I recognise this comes at a time when there have been other pressures too. The number of 18-year-olds is falling.
"Demand is unusually depressed this year because more students went straight to university last year, missing out a gap year. And more may be delaying until next year when ABB kicks in."
According to Ucas, there are more than 26,000 university courses with empty places, compared with 20,000 at this time last year. | A quarter of universities in the UK's Russell Group still have vacancies, as the new tuition fees regime comes in. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Trade unions representing 80% of teachers at French middle schools are leading the action against the plans.
The government wants to reduce teaching of Latin and ancient Greek, scrap an intensive language scheme and change the history curriculum.
Reports have shown increasing inequality and declining performance in French schools.
But the unions say the reforms would only serve to increase inequalities and class separation.
Teachers are expected to hold protests in Paris and dozens of towns and cities around the country on Tuesday.
The action follows weeks of strongly-worded dispute between Education Minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem and her critics.
Ms Vallaud-Belkacem recently described opponents of the history programme as "pseudo-intellectuals" after they said it would deprive pupils of vast chunks of France's cultural heritage.
School change plans come round regularly in France.
They tend to answer to the same perceived imperative: how to restore the "republican" school system to a lost golden age and stop the inexorable decline in international rankings.
This time, Socialist President Francois Hollande and Education Minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem have targeted the "college" - the middle-school for 11- to 15-year-olds that comes between "ecole" (primary school) and "lycee".
But with awful predictability, their designs have again provoked a chorus of outrage - and not just from the teaching unions.
French teachers furious at controversial curriculum changes
The former centre-right Education Minister Luc Ferry has described the changes as "scandalous, empty-headed, noxious and partisan".
With the teaching profession voting overwhelmingly on the left, many teachers are reluctant opponents of the Socialist changes.
But they say the requirement, for example, to devise course work combining different subjects is badly thought out and imposes hours of extra labour.
The pioneering scheme slowed river peak flow by 15-20%, saving Pickering's museum and several homes, Environment Agency (EA) analysis revealed.
More than 2ins (5cm) of rain fell in the area over 36 hours from 26 December.
Pickering has suffered four serious floods in the past 10 years.
However, the EA warned the scheme that saved it last winter would not work in extreme rainfall.
It had decided to experiment with catching rainfall in the hills because building flood walls high enough to protect the town is difficult.
Long, low, leaky dams were installed to slow the flow of water off the slopes.
An upstream flood storage reservoir was also installed, along with the planting of 40,000 trees and the restoration of heather moorland, which acted as a sponge.
The report estimates around half of the reduction in flood water in Pickering was due to the upstream land management measures, and half due through the effect of the flood storage area.
The EA said more tests needed to be done to be certain about the results.
John Curtin, EA's director of flood risk, said: "Natural flood risk management measures, when used alongside more traditional flood defences, can make an effective contribution to reducing flood risk, as demonstrated in Pickering.
"They can also deliver more benefits than just reducing flood risk such as improving water quality, preventing erosion and in some cases storing carbon."
Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss said the Slow the Flow scheme had used nature for protection in "a truly innovative way".
"Natural and man-made defences both have a role to play in reducing flooding, but every approach must be tailored to local geography and knowledge," she said.
Ms Truss is setting out a 25-year plan for the environment, looking at the management of river catchment areas as a whole, to improve flood resilience.
A recent report suggested re-foresting up to 40% of river catchments could help prevent floods.
The EA report comes as two parliamentary committees prepare to quiz ministers about their future strategy for preventing floods.
Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin | Teachers across France are going on strike against government reforms to the education system.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A natural flood management scheme saved a North Yorkshire town from floods at Christmas, a report says. |
Write a summary for this information. | This image shows the Milky Way's 'nuclear star cluster', the biggest in our galaxy.
The spectacular sight is 27,000 light-years away from Earth.
Pictures: Our universe captured by Hubble
The Hubble Telescope has been in orbit for over 25 years and has changed what we know about the Universe.
It's infrared technology allows astronomers to peer through the dust which normally blocks the view of this beautiful area.
At the centre of this star cluster is the Milky Way's gigantic black hole.
A black hole is thought to be an object with a pull of gravity so strong that even light can't escape it.
Experts say this black hole is about four million times the mass of our sun.
Scientists have been studying these stars for more than four years and hope they'll soon be able to find out how the star cluster was formed. | The Hubble Space Telescope has looked deep into the centre of the Milky Way and captured pictures of more than half a million stars. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | The former London mayor was hauled before a disciplinary panel after claiming the Nazi leader supported Zionism in the 1930s.
He could be expelled if Labour bosses decide his comments were "grossly detrimental" to the party.
On Tuesday morning he blamed the Jewish Chronicle and Labour MPs for misreporting his comments.
And he said that if he was expelled from Labour he would take legal action to fight the decision.
Mr Livingstone has been suspended from the Labour Party since the row erupted in April 2016, when he was defending MP Naz Shah over claims she had made anti-Semitic social media posts.
The comment that sparked the row, was made to BBC London. The former mayor said: "When Hitler won his election in 1932, his policy then was that Jews should be moved to Israel. He was supporting Zionism before he went mad and ended up killing six million Jews."
What's the difference between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism?
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Tuesday morning, he said it was a "lie" to say he had said Hitler was a Zionist, saying this had been the cause of offence.
He has repeatedly defended his version of events, saying there had been "real collaboration" between Nazis and Zionists before World War Two.
But Jeremy Newmark, of the Jewish Labour Movement, said Mr Livingstone's "seemingly consistent need to calibrate his language to cause maximum hurt and pain to Jewish people and Holocaust survivors in this country has created a situation where there can no longer be a place for him inside our party".
Mr Newmark said his organisation would raise the matter at Labour's annual conference in September if Mr Livingstone was allowed to stay in the party.
Waqaar Khan, Kadeem Bourne, Kenan Kelly, Marcus Woolcock and Zahid Chaudhary were accused of almost 40 offences, Warwick Crown Court heard.
Ringleader Khan befriended the girls, aged 15 to 17, on social media before picking them up and forcing them to have sex, sometimes filming it.
West Midlands Police described them as "brazen, calculating and evil".
The court heard the men took the girls, some of whom were in care, to secluded areas of the city and sometimes gave them alcohol or drugs before abusing and trafficking them for sex.
More updates on this and other stories in Coventry and Warwickshire
One girl, aged 17, said she was knocked out by one of the men and came round to see them watching a video of herself being raped while she was unconscious.
Det Ch Insp Ian Green said Khan came to the attention of police in March when he was a mutual "friend" on the accounts of several vulnerable young girls in the city.
When police subsequently examined his phone, officers found thousands of text messages containing "sexualised conversations and several videos of graphic sexual abuse".
The girls identified the other men and a "comprehensive investigation" was started.
"It was the brazen nature of their offending that they actually thought they were untouchable and these girls wouldn't report it through fear," Mr Green said.
"So I'd like to thank the bravery of the girls for coming forward to bring these men to justice."
The men, who all know each other, showed no remorse or empathy for their victims, he added.
The uncle of one of the girls described them as "despicable rats".
He said: "They're out there prowling through social media acting on vulnerable girls and abusing the life out of them for their own satisfaction and videoing them for their gratification - they're just treating them like pieces of meat."
The men were remanded in custody to be sentenced next month. | Ken Livingstone will learn later whether he faces Labour disciplinary action over his comments about Adolf Hitler.
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Five men have been convicted of sexually abusing and trafficking six teenage girls in Coventry. |
Summarize the provided information. | A government compromise (pilot schemes) designed to stave off defeat was not tabled in time for MPs to vote on it, but Communities Minister Brandon Lewis said the government would amend its own Enterprise Bill later in the House of Lords.
The SNP's decision to vote against the Bill, even though Sunday trading is devolved to Scotland, has prompted accusations of hypocrisy and increased the prospect of a government defeat.
More than 20 Conservative MPs, including Byron Davies and David Jones, have signed a 'rebel' amendment to the Bill.
Labour MPs appear to be wholly united against the Bill, which would devolve the power over Sunday trading hours to local councils rather than automatically extend shopping hours.
Welsh Liberal Democrat Mark Williams is minded to vote against (the Lib Dems have a free vote) but is listening to the debate before making a final decision.
The three Plaid Cymru MPs will vote against giving councils the new powers, arguing that the decision should be devolved to the National Assembly for Wales.
That option isn't on the table today, so Plaid will effectively vote for the status quo - for the power to remain in London rather than in town halls across Wales.
Plaid's parliamentary leader Hywel Williams said: "Had the Wales Office been a bit more muscular they might have been able to include powers over Sunday trading in the Wales Bill - and we would have supported that.
"They are devolving the power to the London (regional) assembly but not to the Welsh (national) assembly
"We are not in favour of the government here dealing directly with matters to do with our local authorities - that's a matter for our government in Cardiff as far as we're concerned."
UPDATE: The government lost the key division by 317 votes to 286. | The debate over Sunday trading hours is proving rather fractious with plenty of "blue-on-blue" action as Conservative MPs wonder publicly why it wasn't in their manifesto for last year's general election. |
Please summarize the following text. | Jeff Henry, 39, died of head injuries after being chased and attacked on Campkin Road, in the King's Hedges area of the city, on 7 June.
A 34-year-old man, from Huntingdon, and a 36-year-old man, from St Ives, were re-arrested on suspicion of murder having previously been on police bail.
The pair are being questioned at Thorpe Wood police station.
Ben Maguire, 28, of Minerva Way, Cambridge, was charged with murder last month and is due to appear in court on 4 September.
Mr Henry was spotted running away from men along Campkin Road just moments before being attacked, once at 00:20 and again at 00:45 BST.
He died a week later in hospital. | Two men have been re-arrested over the murder of a Cambridge man who was assaulted twice in the same night. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | The 21-year-old German's injuries are not life-threatening, according to the Bundesliga 2 club.
A second family member was also injured and is in hospital after the incident in Wiesbaden, near Frankfurt.
The German club said they was "shocked, stunned and deeply saddened" and would "be wherever our help and support is needed".
Wachs was yet to play for second-tier Dynamo, having signed in the summer from Mainz, where he mainly featured in the reserve team.
"Marc, his family, and the process of recovery, both physically and mentally, are now the only priorities," said Dynamo sport managing director Ralf Minge.
"Everything else does not matter. I would also like to express our deep compassion to Marc, his family and all his relatives.
"We specifically ask you to respect the privacy of Marc and his family more than ever."
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CIE Well Control Ltd, a specialist in subsea and surface operations, has called in administrators from KPMG.
The move comes after orders fell away, in the wake of the oil price collapse.
Twenty-one people have been made redundant, while two staff have been kept on to handle the administration process. A buyer for the assets is being sought.
In May, more than 50 jobs were lost at Aberdeen engineering firm Enterprise Engineering Services after the company went into administration.
During the same month oil and gas shipping company Harkand Group collapsed, with the loss of more than 170 jobs in Aberdeen and London.
Administrators at Deloitte were called in after the company was hit by the prolonged fall in global oil prices. | Dynamo Dresden defender Marc Wachs has received emergency surgery after a shooting that killed a family member.
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Early results from Turkey election give ruling AK party 53% of the vote, with more than 40% of votes counted
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Another engineering firm working in Aberdeen's oil and gas sector has collapsed. |
Summarize the provided information. | But appearances can be deceptive. This is a violent and unstable region - a breeding ground for international terrorism.
That is why US troops arrived here shortly after the 9/11 attacks in New York and Washington.
"All the attacks that occurred between 1994 and 2001 at least touched, in some part, the southern Philippines," said Col Mark Miller, commander of the US Task Force here.
The region was used "either as a safe haven, or to conduct planning, or training, of the individual concerned," he said.
The Americans' mission here is part of the War on Terror; their mandate to advise their Philippine counterparts on strategy and tactics to win the fight against the different Islamic rebel groups that plague these islands.
It may be less well known than missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, but it ignites the same divided passions and still, more than 10 years later, shows no sign of coming to an end.
A quick look at the roll call of militants who have passed through these islands shows clearly why the Americans are here.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the architect of the 9/11 attacks; Ramzi Yousef, accused of a pivotal role in the World Trade Centre bombings in the 1990s; Dulmatin, a key figure behind the Bali attacks - all of them spent time in the Philippines.
They were sheltered by the Abu Sayyaf, a home-grown insurgent group that claims it is fighting for an Islamic state but in reality is more of a kidnap-for-ransom gang.
Guide to the Philippines conflict
It released two Filipino hostages earlier this month, but is still thought to be holding six foreigners - two Europeans, an Australian, a Malaysian, a Japanese and a Jordanian.
The Abu Sayyaf is a shadowy organisation, difficult to track, and with substantial support among local Muslim communities.
And it is not the only rebel group on these islands. Other Philippine groups, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), are active in the area. These two groups have agreed peace deals with the government, but that does not mean they are no longer a fighting force. Just this week clashes between the MNLF and Abu Sayyaf left about 30 people dead.
Then there are the militants who arrived across the porous sea borders from Malaysia and Indonesia - members of the regional group Jemaah Islamiah, which has known links to al-Qaeda.
For ordinary residents of Sulu, like 16-year-old Lovell Lauzon, everyday life is punctuated by the knowledge that somewhere nearby, violent extremists are living and possibly planning their next move.
"Fear hinders you from doing what you want. It limits you," she said.
"Even if you want to go to places - the beaches, the forests - because of those threats, you are afraid."
Fear also hinders business, growth and development. The Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao, which includes Sulu, is the poorest region in the Philippines.
It has the highest levels of infant mortality, the lowest levels of adult literacy, and the big chain stores and shopping malls seen in other parts of the country are largely absent.
Despite fighting numerous rebel groups across numerous islands, the Philippine military gradually seem to be gaining ground, no doubt helped by the training they have received from the Americans.
The militants occupy just a third of the area they once did.
But the battle against the insurgents is not just about gaining territory - it is also about gaining the trust of the locals.
Some Filipinos - and not just those in Sulu - are uneasy about the US presence in the southern Philippines, questioning its necessity and even claiming it is a retrograde step, back to the US colonial past.
And to the average Sulu resident, members of the Philippine military are almost as foreign as the Americans, as most of them are non-Muslims from elsewhere in the country.
Civilians caught in the crossfire, heavy-handed tactics, and the fact that many people have relatives in one or more of the rebel groups, all contribute to this sense of mistrust.
And if the locals do not trust the security forces above the rebels, the rebels will never be defeated.
That is why the US military is moving its focus away from military tactics and onto efforts to engage the local community.
Together with their Philippine counterparts, they hold events to provide free healthcare and food, and foster initiatives to promote peace.
"Our objective is to start the healing process. We want to build trust again," said the commander of the local marines, Col Orlando de Leon.
He is extremely optimistic about the progress being made, and is already looking ahead to a time in which tourists and investors flock to Sulu.
He showed me promotional material filled with images of tropical beaches, stunning sunsets and exotic birds.
But all that is optimistic yet. The last foreign birdwatchers known to have visited the region - two men from the Netherlands and Switzerland - are among Abu Sayyaf's current hostages.
And as Col Miller said: "Even if the Philippine military is successful in rounding up all the terrorists… there's still the base conditions that need to be addressed."
"Because if not, in one, two, three years, there'll be another group with another name that will be down here."
Progress is definitely being made, but right now, the islands of Sulu are still as dangerous as they are beautiful. | The islands of Sulu, in the south-west Philippines, look like the type of tropical paradise you would see on the front cover of a tourist brochure. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | Alexander Gwillym, 39, of Llantarnam, Cwmbran, sold the repackaged Asda chocolate bars as the Nestle brand from his shop in Cwmbran, Torfaen.
He and his firm admitted eight consumer protection charges to Newport magistrates and were ordered to pay a total of £1,880 in fines and costs.
The court heard Gwillym had tried to lodge his own "Mr Wonka Bar" trademark.
Magistrates were told Torfaen council trading standards officers had previously warned the defendant about his actions after he began selling the fake branded bars in September 2012.
An investigation found his store, Sweet66 Ltd in Cwmbran Shopping Centre, was selling repackaged Smart Price chocolate bars available from Asda.
The sweet shop firm was fined £400 and asked to pay £1,000 towards the prosecutions costs.
Company director Gwillym was fined £400 with an additional £80 victim surcharge.
The defendant had been told his bid to register a Mr Wonka Bar trademark was too similar to Nestle's Wonka trademarks and was likely to mislead the public, the court heard.
After the hearing, Torfaen councillor Gwyneira Clark, executive member for housing, planning and public protection, said: "Consumers expect to buy goods, including food, that are correctly labelled in accordance with consumer protection laws.
"The work of Torfaen's public protection service is vital to safeguard the health and economic well-being of the public and this prosecution sends out a message to all retailers that selling counterfeit goods will not be tolerated." | A shopkeeper duped customers by selling 30p supermarket chocolates as £3 Wonka bars, a court has heard. |
Please summarize the passage below. | Russell Greaves gave first aid to 19-year-old Sarah Hicks on the pitch after her father left with her younger sister in an ambulance.
After giving evidence at the new inquests, he addressed her mother and father, Jenni and Trevor, in court.
He said Sarah was "with someone who cared and was not alone".
The detective constable, who was at the match as a spectator, said his words "could not remove their sense of loss, pain or utter devastation" but he wanted "to take this opportunity to say to them that I did my very best for Sarah in the circumstances - I could not have done more".
On Tuesday, Trevor Hicks described to the inquests in Warrington how he gave his daughter Sarah and her 15-year-old sister Vicki mouth-to-mouth resuscitation as they lay unconscious.
He told the court he moved from one daughter to the other, shouting their names and asking for help before taking the "very difficult decision" to travel to hospital with Vicki, leaving Sarah behind.
The sisters were among 96 fans who were fatally injured in a crush at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.
BBC News: Profiles of all those who died | An off-duty police officer who tried to save the life of a teenager caught in the Hillsborough disaster has told her parents he did his "very best" for her. |
Summarize the passage below. | A cinema which screened a trailer for an 18-rated horror film before the Angry Birds Movie has apologised after young children were "left in tears".
The Cineworld branch accidentally played the trailer for supernatural chiller The Bye Bye Man to the young audience.
One mother has accused the multiplex, in Didcot, Oxfordshire, of "traumatising" youngsters.
Scientists are worried that dust from a planned quarry could affect their nuclear fusion experiments.
Hills Quarry Products wants to dig out 2.5 million tonnes of sand and gravel from an Oxfordshire site over 10 years.
But the Culham Science Centre (CSC), which is home to the UK Atomic Energy Authority, said its sensitive equipment could be affected adversely by "wind borne dust".
Firefighters battled a blaze in a field that produced plumes of smoke visible for miles around.
Emergency services were called on Monday to crops on fire in the Newington Hill area, two miles south of Stadhampton, Oxfordshire.
Four fire engines and specialist 4x4 appliance were sent to the scene, which was filmed by a drone piloted by Jared Reabow.
Teenagers campaigning against a town's decision not to fly the rainbow flag said they received homophobic insults from passers-by.
The 15 to 17-year-olds organised an event to support the annual Oxford Pride in Abingdon town centre.
They said they were "shocked" by the negative responses, which came mainly from "older generations".
Thames Valley Police gives more than £750,000 to charity per year from the proceeds of selling confiscated items from criminals.
One of the main recipients is Search Dogs Bucks, which helps find lost people in and around Oxfordshire.
All the dog owners involved volunteer to help out the charity. | It's time to catch up on some of the most memorable and popular news stories for Oxfordshire this past week in case you missed them. |
Can you summarize the following information? | 9 August 2016 Last updated at 09:14 BST
Some of the robots did fall flat on their faces but they still managed to break the record for the most robots dancing all at the same time.
Each of the 1,007 robots were controlled by just one mobile phone and had to dance for a whole minute.
Pictures from Guinness World Records.
Rooney was arrested shortly after 02:00 BST after officers stopped a black VW Beetle on Altrincham Road, Wilmslow.
Cheshire Police said Rooney, 31, had been charged with driving whilst over the prescribed limit.
The ex-England captain has been released on bail and is due to appear at Stockport Magistrates' Court later this month.
Rooney, who retired from the national team last month, is England's all-time record goal scorer.
He rejoined his boyhood club Everton this summer, 13 years after leaving the Merseyside team for Manchester United.
Rooney's court hearing is set for 18 September - the day after Everton take on Manchester United at Old Trafford in the Premier League.
The user interface (UI), which features sliding card graphics, is powered by software originally created for Palm smartphones, which the South Korean firm bought from its previous owner HP last year,
LG said more than 70% of its smart TVs released this year would use webOS.
Analysts had complained LG's earlier menu system had been too confusing.
The firm unveiled the new technology at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, where many of its rivals are also showing off new televisions.
The centre-piece of the new UI is Launcher - a scrollable menu that runs across the bottom part of the screen, allowing the owner to switch between content.
Different coloured cards are used to represent on-air programmes; internet-based movies and shows from firms including Netflix and Amazon; apps including Twitter and Skype; and media stored on other devices.
The idea, the company said, was to allow viewers to simultaneously watch a show, play a game or surf the internet while also searching for other content - removing the need to navigate to a home screen.
A second menu bar, Today, can be activated to run horizontally across the central part of the screen providing suggestions for popular shows and other content the software believes is likely to interest the watcher.
LG also highlighted that the software was designed to make it easier to set up the TV. For example, if you plug in a games console it is identified as such, rather than as an HDMI source.
It also suggested it would be relatively easy for developers to create third-party apps for the platform.
"One of the big problems TV manufacturers have had has been trying to tailor the available content to each user," said Edward Border, from the consultancy IHS Screen Digest.
"They have struggled to crack how to avoid requiring too many clicks or menus to go through. Previous efforts to simplify things have only resulted in it becoming difficult for owners to find what they wanted."
Early feedback for LG's new approach suggested it was an improvement on its previous design, but not a huge leap forward.
"It won't generate massive consumer demand for LG's TVs," wrote Dieter Bohn for the Verge news site, which had an early hands-on with the technology.
"But what it could do is make your next smart TV a little less painful to use."
LG also used its Las Vegas press conference to announce two new pieces of wearable technology.
Its Lifeband Touch is a wristband that features an OLED display, which activates when the wearer rotates their wrist.
Its accelerometer and altimeter sensors allow it to display how many calories have been burned, the number of steps taken and distance covered.
In addition it can tell the time and provide alerts about calls and texts sent to a Bluetooth linked mobile phone, as well as providing a way to control music played via the handset.
The firm also showed off its Heart Rate Earphones, which are designed to capture data about the wearer's blood flow and oxygen consumption while exercising.
LG said both devices would be released in the US before the end of June before rolling out to other markets.
The firm had shown off another fitness tracking wristband at last year's CES but never put it on sale. | More than a thousand robots have been dancing at a festival in China and better still they've danced their way to a world record.
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Everton striker Wayne Rooney has been charged with drink-driving, Cheshire Police have said.
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LG has shown off a "simplified" way to control and find content on its smart TVs using the webOS operating system. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Media playback is not supported on this device
The communications officer allegedly shoved Pinilla at half-time in a game Brazil eventually won on penalties after it had ended 1-1.
Paiva is banned for three matches, with a fourth suspended for two years.
That means he will miss Tuesday's semi-final against Germany.
He will also not be involved in either the final or the third-place match.
Paiva has already served one part of his three-game ban after missing the 2-1 quarter-final win against Colombia on Friday.
He has also been fined 10,000 Swiss francs (£6,500). | Brazil press officer Rodrigo Paiva has been suspended for the rest of the World Cup by Fifa after an incident with Chile player Mauricio Pinilla during a last-16 match on 28 June. |
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