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Provide a brief summary for the information below. | Shocked by the incident and other similar attacks on Africans in India, independent photographer Mahesh Shantaram began documenting the lives of Africans living in India.
Beginning with Bangalore, Shantaram travelled to the cities of Jaipur, Delhi and Manipal, choosing to focus on students, as they are a small and vulnerable group.
Shantaram's series of intimate portraits is part of an upcoming exhibition organised by Tasveer.
"Each portrait plays a part in unravelling the complex web of experiences of Africans in India that, put together, paint a picture of loneliness, placelessness and a sense of hostility," says art expert Caroline Bertram, in an original text on the exhibition.
Jared Loughner, 22, entered the pleas over the attempted assassination of Representative Gabrielle Giffords and two aides.
State charges in the six deaths and other injuries are expected to follow.
Ms Giffords, who was shot in the head, is at a rehabilitation centre in Texas.
Mr Loughner, who has been in jail since the attack, arrived amid high security for his arraignment hearing.
Wearing glasses and an orange prison jumpsuit, Mr Loughner sat quietly through the whole hearing, smiling broadly, the Associated Press reported.
'Remarkable progress'
The 8 January shooting occurred at a meeting Ms Giffords, a Democrat, was holding for constituents at a supermarket in Tucson, Arizona.
Among the dead were a nine-year-old girl and federal judge John Roll. Federal prosecutors are weighing whether Mr Loughner can be charged with a federal crime over his death.
Prosecutors have said Mr Loughner, who had been rejected by the US military due to drug use and suspended from a college amid concerns about his mental health, targeted Ms Giffords for assassination.
Ms Giffords has made what doctors call remarkable progress, and is undergoing a course of intensive rehabilitation at Memorial Hermann Rehabilitation Hospital in Houston, where her husband Mark Kelly works as a Nasa astronaut.
Mr Loughner is represented by Judy Clarke, a prominent defence lawyer who represented an infamous parcel bomber and the man convicted of setting a bomb at the 1996 Olympic games in Atlanta. She is known as a fierce opponent of capital punishment. | In January, a Tanzanian student was assaulted and partially stripped by a mob in the southern Indian city of Bangalore after a Sudanese student's car ran over and killed a local woman.
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The man accused of the Arizona shooting attack that killed six people and wounded 13, including a US congresswoman, has pleaded not guilty to three attempted murder charges. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | A last-minute equaliser saw Linfield grab a 2-2 league draw in November, the Blues having played for more than 80 minutes of the match with nine men.
"We were very disappointed that day but if we get our attitude right, play as we have in our last few games and take our chances, then we can beat anyone in this league," said Hamilton.
The dismissals of Matthew Clarke and Roy Carroll within the first 10 minutes of the Premiership clash two months ago appeared to have ended Linfield's hopes of claiming anything from that fixture, but Paul Smyth's late equaliser ensured that they secured a potentially precious point.
New Lurgan Blues striker James Gray gave the club a boost by scoring twice in last week's Irish Cup fifth round win over Portstewart.
Linfield have defender Jimmy Callacher available again after missing the Irish Cup extra-time win over Glentoran because of an automatic one-match suspension.
David Healy's side lie seven points behind leaders Crusaders, who travel to the Oval to face Glentoran on Saturday.
Glens manager Gary Haveron has Steven Gordon back following a back injury, while Marcus Kane made a return to action from the substitutes' bench in the Irish Cup defeat by Linfield.
Meanwhile third-placed Cliftonville include midfielder Kym Nelson in their squad for the Premiership clash with Ards at Solitude, the midfielder having been signed from Glentoran during the week.
Coleraine have been boosted by the return to fitness of strikers Gary Twigg and James McLaughlin, the Bannsiders having won their last three in all competitions.
Oran Kearney's outfit have taken maximum points form their last five Premiership games with Portadown and will hope to extend that run at Ballycastle Road.
Portadown will be without suspended pair Robert Garrett and Garry Breen, while manager Niall Currie has injury concerns over Keith O'Hara, Sean Mackle and Mark McAllister.
Ballymena United have new acquisition Joe McKinney available for the visit of Dungannon Swifts and the Sky Blues will hope for improvement in their league form, having conceded eight goals in losing their previous two fixtures.
The Swifts are unbeaten in their last four in all competitions and have won one and drawn one of their two league encounters with United during the present campaign.
Munir Hassan Mohammed, 36, and Rowaida El-Hassan, 32, denied at the Old Bailey of planning to make a bomb or poison to use against British citizens.
Mr Mohammed denied a total of three terrorism offences, while Ms El-Hassan pleaded not guilty to two charges.
The pair, who were arrested during anti-terrorism raids, were remanded in custody and await trial in June.
Mr Mohammed, an Eritrean national seeking asylum in the UK, and Ms El-Hassan were arrested on 12 December.
They are jointly charged with preparing an act of terrorism between 7 July 2016 and their arrest last year.
The pair both pleaded not guilty to researching, planning and obtaining materials to produce an "improvised explosive device or poison" with a view to committing an attack in the UK.
Mr Mohammed, of Leopold Street, Derby, is further charged with being a member of Islamic State (IS).
He faces one other charge relating to the possession of information useful to terrorism and dissemination of terrorist publications.
Ms El-Hassan, of Willesden Lane, London, is further charged with possessing instructions on how to build an explosive device inside a mobile phone.
The pair were among six people arrested across the country, the rest of whom were released without charge.
Danny Whitaker broke the deadlock from the spot after Reece Styche was brought down by Braintree's Sam Habergham.
Styche set up Danny Rowe to score from close range before John McCombe headed in Whitaker's cross to extend the lead.
Simeon Akinola pulled one back, but Braintree stayed one place below the play-off spots as Macclesfield made it six league games without defeat. | Glenavon manager Gary Hamilton hopes his players can make amends for the disappointment of their last home game against Linfield when the teams meet at Mourneview Park on Saturday.
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A man and woman have pleaded not guilty to making preparations for a terrorism attack in the UK.
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Macclesfield Town claimed their third consecutive National League win by beating Braintree Town. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Rosberg beat Hamilton to pole position and said: "Lewis has everything to lose and I have everything to gain".
Hamilton is 17 points clear of the German and will win his second drivers' title even if he finishes second.
The 29-year-old said he does not "pay much attention" to Rosberg's comments.
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Ahead of the last race of the season, Hamilton said: "My number one focus tomorrow is just doing the best I can and driving the way I have been driving for quite some time.
"You want to get the pole, but just because I'm second doesn't mean we can't win.
"You can't really measure how big it is. It is obviously the biggest day of my life."
Hamilton and Rosberg have fought a near private battle for the title all season as their Mercedes car has been a class above the rest of the field.
But the childhood friends, who were team-mates when they raced go-karts aged 14, have seen that relationship tested this season.
Wheel-to-wheel battles and clashes on and off the track have stoked their rivalry as the season finale edged closer.
And thanks to F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone's idea to introduce double points for the first time at the final race, Hamilton must now finish second, rather than sixth, to claim the title, adding more tension to an already anxious fight.
Formula 1 has headed to the desert and the spectacular Yas Marina on Yas Island for the title-deciding showdown, built on land reclaimed from the sea specifically to host a grand prix.
The event produces spectacular images, with the race starting in daylight and ending in darkness and under floodlights, with the Yas Hotel that straddles the circuit using its 5,389 pivoting LED panes to produce a stunning light show.
The venue hosts just 41,000 people, but the focus is on offering a luxury experience and race-goers are rewarded with nightly post-event concerts from artists such as Pharrell Williams, The Who and DJ Armin van Buuren.
Rosberg said: "The pressure is on Lewis. I have to keep the pressure on him and hope he makes a mistake, which we saw in Brazil."
Hamilton made errors on his two laps in final qualifying and lost out to Rosberg in the battle for pole by 0.386secs.
But the Englishman pointed out that Rosberg himself had made an error in the second part of qualifying, which forced him to do one more lap than planned on the set of tyres with which he will start the race.
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"Hopefully that will have an effect tomorrow," said Hamilton. "He's trying everything possible in his head to try to find a way to deal with things. He did a good job in Q3 and I'll try to make up for that in the race."
Hamilton said he had not yet decided how to approach the race but insisted: "My aim is to win, as always."
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix coverage details
Full final qualifying results | Lewis Hamilton says his Formula 1 title showdown with Nico Rosberg in Abu Dhabi will be "the biggest day of my life", while his Mercedes team-mate insists all the pressure is on the Briton. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | About 260 signs were given to the Friends of Ceredigion Museum in order to raise money for renovations.
The road signs were replaced as part of an £800,000 scheme to improve the look of the Welsh seaside town.
The value of the "unique" signs has not yet been confirmed but they will go under the hammer from 19:00 GMT at The Coliseum in Aberystwyth.
Mona Morris, president of the Friends of Ceredigion Museum, said: "We've already had lots of interest in the road signs from local people and businesses.
"The signs are a unique bit of history that really evoke a sense of place."
The auctioneer on the night will be local hotelier, Geraint Hughes.
"It'll be fun to wield the hammer again," the former auctioneer said.
23 June 2016 Last updated at 15:56 BST
The Orbit was originally built for the London 2012 Olympic Games, but has now been turned into one of the longest and tallest tunnel slides in the world.
Have a closer look a slide in picture here.
The slide takes riders around 40 seconds to reach the bottom, reaching speeds of up to 15 mph as the slide loops its way around the sculpture 12 times.
It's made up of 30 separate sections including a tight corkscrew section known as the "bettfeder", which is German for bedspring.
So we sent Ayshah to be one of the first people to have a go on it!
Johnston came off during the 250cc session, in which he set the fastest speed, and was taken to hospital.
The Fermanagh rider crashed after exiting the Hairpin Bend.
Derek Sheils was quickest in the Superbike practice for the Dundrod 150 races on Thursday, followed by Conor Cummins and Michael Dunlop.
Dubliner Sheils clocked 117.19mph on his Cookstown BE Engineering Suzuki with Cummins second on a Honda on 116.93 and then Dunlop on his Hawk Racing BMW on 116.35.
Michael Dunlop was best of the Supersports on his Yamaha at 117.782mph.
Bruce Anstey clocked the second quickest time, 117.115, with Derek McGee next at 116.332.
Derek McGee was fastest in the Supertwins on his Cookstown BE Engineering Kawasaki at 108.11mph, then Dan Cooper with 106.85 and Michael Sweeney on 105.95.
Johnston topped the 250ccs on 103.75 before his crash, ahead of Neil Kernohan on 101.75.
Christian Elkin was best of the Ultra-lightweights with 100.183 on his Moto3 machine, followed by McGee at 96.90.
Johnston won both Supersport races and the Superstock event in the 2015 Ulster Grand Prix.
He has taken in some British Supersport rounds this season and finished fourth in a race at Knockhill in July.
The diminutive rider is also a three-time North West 200 victor and campaigns BMWs in the Superbikes and Superstocks and a Triumph in the Supersports.
Thursday 11 August - Roads closed from 10:00 BST to 21:30 for practicing and five Dundrod 150 races - National Race (5 laps), Ultralightweight/Lightweight (5 laps), Supertwins (5 laps), Challenge Race (5 laps), Superbike (6 laps).
Saturday 13 August - Roads closed from 09:30 BST to 20:30 for seven-race Ulster Grand Prix race meeting: Superstock (6 laps), Supersport Race 1 (6 laps), Ultralightweight/Lightweight (5 laps), UGP Superbike Race (7 laps), Supertwins (5 laps), Supersport Race 2 (6 laps), Superbike Race 2 (6 laps). | Old Aberystwyth road signs will be auctioned on Monday after being replaced with Edwardian-style versions.
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The UK's tallest sculpture, the ArcelorMittal Orbit in London, has been transformed into something new - a gigantic slide!
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Last year's treble winner Lee Johnston has been ruled out of the Ulster Grand Prix after suffering a fractured collarbone in a practice crash. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Police confirmed that the body of a man in his 50s was recovered at about 09:00 on Thursday morning.
The kayaker got into difficulty in the water near an area known as Elephant Rock, 10 miles south of Forres, on Wednesday afternoon.
A coastguard rescue operation was launched, but the search was called off in the face of worsening weather conditions.
The man's next of kin have been made aware.
The company, which has faced criticism from many, including the Church of England, over its interest charges, said demand for its loans had soared.
In its annual statement, Wonga reported £1.2bn in lending, an increase of 68%.
Wonga has also opened a business lending arm, and expanded abroad.
So called "payday loan" firms, which often lend to those who cannot get a loan from a High Street bank, are currently the subject of a Competition Commission review.
It is estimated the sector has two million customers with loans worth £2bn.
Wonga typically charges interest rates of 1% a day, with a £5.50 charge, for loans of up to £1,000.
In a statement, Errol Damelin, Wonga founder and chief executive, said that discussions over the company's practices were welcome, and that recent criticisms from the Archbishop of Canterbury earlier this year had, "encouraged a discussion around who our customers are and why they use us".
Mr Damelin added: "Access to practical and affordable sources of credit is a big issue for our society and Wonga is playing a part by lending responsibly, and at scale, to people who can generally afford to pay us back quickly".
Mark Jones, 45, of Cwmbran, Torfaen, has pleaded not guilty to murder at his trial at Newport Crown Court.
Continuing to give evidence in his defence, he said he checked for injuries "once or twice".
The court has heard Amelia died after suffering a "catastrophic" bleed to the brain and a fractured skull. | The body of a kayaker has been found in the River Findhorn in Moray.
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Wonga, the short-term loans provider, has reported pre-tax profits of £84.5m for 2012, an increase of 35% on the previous year.
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A man accused of murdering his five-week-old granddaughter has told a court he "thought the baby was alright" after dropping her on her head. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | A wine press and fermentation jars from about 6,000 years ago were found in a cave in the south Caucasus country.
Co-director of the excavation Gregory Areshian, of the University of California, Los Angeles, said it was the earliest example of complete wine production.
The findings were announced by the National Geographic Society.
They have been published in the online edition of the Journal of Archaeological Science.
The facility was uncovered in the mountains of south-east Armenia. The same area was the site of the discovery of the oldest known leather shoe, dated to about 5,500 years ago.
Inside the cave, the international team of archaeologists found a shallow basin, measuring about 1m (3ft) across, that was positioned to drain into a deep vat.
The basin could have served as a wine press where people stomped the grapes with their feet, Mr Areshian said.
The team also found grape seeds, the remains of pressed grapes and dozens of dried vines.
The seeds were from the same type of grapes - Vitis vinifera vinifera - still used to make wine today.
The wine-making facility was surrounded by graves and the team says the wine may have been intended for ceremonial use.
Mr Areshian said that already-know evidence of wine drinking pre-dates the Armenian facility.
"The evidence argues convincingly for a wine-making facility," said Patrick McGovern, scientific director of the Biomolecular Archaeology Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia, who was not part of the research team, Associated Press news agency reported.
He said such large scale wine production implied that the Eurasian grape had already been domesticated 6,000 years ago.
The earliest comparable remains to those uncovered in Armenia were found in the tomb of the ancient Egyptian King Scorpion I, dating to around 5,100 years ago, AP reported. | The world's earliest known wine-making facility has been discovered in Armenia, archaeologists say. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Members of the Hindu Sena held a prayer in support of Mr Trump winning the US presidential election.
The little-known group said they supported Mr Trump "because he is hope for humanity against Islamic terror".
Mr Trump has proposed a ban on Muslims entering the US - drawing widespread criticism at home and abroad.
He has also advocated killing the families of terrorists and invading Syria to eradicate the so-called Islamic State group and appropriate its oil.
Around a dozen members of Hindu Sena lit a ritual fire and prayers in a park in Delhi on Wednesday, and hung a banner declaring their support for Mr Trump.
The American Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs backing Trump
Surrounded by statues of Hindu gods, they threw offerings such as seeds, grass and ghee (clarified butter) into a small ritual fire.
"Only Donald Trump can save humanity," Vishnu Gupta, founder of the group, told the Associated Press news agency.
He also told The Indian Express newspaper that the group had planned "several events to express its wholehearted support for Mr Trump".
The nationalist group has previously been known for vandalism and assault, attacking the office of a political party in 2014, and spraying a legislator who protested against a ban on eating beef.
Steven Haggerty, 27, from Hamilton, abused a 27-year-old woman at a house in the South Lanarkshire town in 2012.
He also abused and raped another woman between 26 and 30 December 2014.
At the High Court in Edinburgh, judge Lord Pentland told Haggerty he would serve a minimum of six years in jail but may never be released.
Addressing Haggerty, the judge said: "I formed the strong impression from seeing and hearing both the complainers in the witness box that they were each vulnerable individuals.
"The picture which emerges from your criminal record is of a persistent offender who has difficulty in controlling his behaviour. You have a marked propensity to resort to violence.
"I am entirely satisfied that the risk criteria are met and that an order for lifelong restriction is necessary and appropriate to protect the public from serious harm."
Following conviction, it emerged that Haggerty was convicted of lewd and libidinous behaviour in October 2005 following high court proceedings.
The court heard how the offending behaviour on that occasion related to children who were aged between 12 to 14.
He also had convictions for violence and knife possession.
Det Ch Insp Samantha McCluskey, who led the inquiry into Haggerty, described him as "a dangerous individual who preyed on vulnerable women".
"The two victims in this case were previous partners of Haggerty, who were brave enough to speak out about the serious sexual violence they endured at his hands," she said.
"He is finally being brought to account for his actions, and I hope that this result brings some form of closure for his victims, who have shown real courage in coming forward and going through this difficult process."
22 November 2016 Last updated at 17:23 GMT
Winds of over 80 miles per hour whipped up seas on the coast, and rain caused lots of flooding inland.
Angus caused lots of problems, and here's how the storm affected many of you.
Check out the video.
According to the US Geological Survey, the quake's epicentre was in the northern province of Badakhshan, close to the Pakistani and Tajik borders.
It is not clear if there were any casualties in the area itself, but at least 17 people were injured in the Pakistani city of Peshawar.
Hundreds were killed by a quake in the same area on 26 October.
Residents in the Afghan capital, Kabul, and the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, were reported to have run into the streets after feeling the impact of the quake.
In Peshawar some old homes and walls collapsed, Hamid Nawaz, the head of Pakistan's disaster management authority, told AP.
The region has a history of powerful earthquakes caused by the northward collision of the Indian and Eurasian plates. They are moving towards each other at a rate of 4-5cm per year.
In 2005, a magnitude 7.6 quake in Pakistan-administered Kashmir left more than 75,000 people dead.
In April this year, Nepal suffered its worst earthquake on record with 9,000 people killed and about 900,000 homes damaged or destroyed. | Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has gained some unlikely fans - including a right-wing Hindu group in India.
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A violent rapist who was convicted of attacks on two women he met through internet dating sites has been given an order of lifelong restriction.
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This week The UK was battered by storm Angus, which brought wind, rain and a lot of disruption, especially for schools and people travelling.
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A powerful 6.3-magnitude earthquake has struck northern Afghanistan, with tremors felt as far away as India. |
Summarize the provided section. | Steven Broomhead, chief executive of Warrington Borough Council, wrote to NHS England's chief executive Simon Stevens saying decisions were being made "without any local transparency".
He warned: "Such arrogance is bound to fail".
NHS England said it wanted to see more joint working but it was "accountable to parliament".
A spokesperson added: "That is what the N in NHS means - National Health Service."
Mr Broomhead's letter, written in his capacity as chair of the borough's health and wellbeing board, comes as 44 regional NHS officials draw up Sustainability and Transformation Plans, designed to introduce major reforms to local health services.
He wrote he was "astounded by NHS England's naivety" and said changes to where people receive services and what services they receive needed "local scrutiny and local community involvement".
He added he had experienced changes to stroke and trauma services as well as primary care provision, "with no local discussion or consideration".
NHS England said it wanted to see more joint working which would sometimes be for areas larger than individual council boundaries.
It stressed that where service changes were needed "they will of course continue to be consulted on" in partnership with local communities, including council's health and wellbeing committees.
The US is thought to have dropped the 89cm-long (3ft) device during WW2.
It was found by workers building a car park at the site where a four-decade-long decommissioning process is under way.
Tens of thousands of residents had to evacuate the area after a reactor meltdown in 2011 following an earthquake and tsunami.
The incident at the Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) site was the world's most serious nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986.
No-one died directly in the meltdown but three former Tepco executives are facing trial on charges of negligence because of deaths related to the area's evacuation.
Tepco said construction work was immediately suspended after the object was found and a temporary exclusion zone put in place while bomb disposal experts were deployed.
It is not uncommon for unexploded WW2 devices to be found in Japan over 70 years on from the end of the war.
The Fukushima area was previously home to a Japanese military base.
Pictures of the incident, in Aberystwyth last August, were published before Saturday's Wales v England match by the Sun newspaper.
They appear to show Mr Davies holding a shoe and chasing a man during the late-night incident.
The player apologised, saying he "reacted wrongly to the situation".
Dyfed-Powys Police said no further action was taken at the time due to insufficient evidence, but "as a result of new video evidence" the force was reviewing the incident.
Mr Davies is said to have reacted after a woman was allegedly pushed to the floor
A woman is heard in the footage saying: "Gareth please, you will lose your job for this."
He apologised after Wales' 16-21 Six Nations defeat at Cardiff's Principality Stadium, the Sunday Times website reported.
"I reacted wrongly to the situation and have learnt from it and understand that I have a responsibility to the game at all times," he said.
The Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) said the matter had been dealt with internally.
A spokesman said: "As with all players, Gareth has been reminded of his responsibility as an international rugby player." | A council chief has written to the NHS warning its plan for implementing local reforms was a "recipe for disaster".
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A suspected unexploded bomb has been found at the site of the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan.
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Wales scrum-half Gareth Davies has apologised after footage emerged appearing to show him scuffling with bouncers in Ceredigion. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | The Premier League leaders extended their winning run to 13 matches, but Liverpool and Arsenal remain in pursuit, with Manchester City out of the top four after Tottenham's thumping win at Watford.
At the other end of the table, Swansea and Sunderland were both humbled, while champions Leicester got a much-needed win.
Here's my team of the week. Do you agree with it? Choose your own from a shortlist compiled by BBC Sport journalists.
Pick your XI from our list and share with your friends.
There seems to be a correlation between Kasper Schmeichel being in goal and Leicester City keeping clean sheets.
They haven't kept that many this season and that's probably why the Foxes are mightily relieved to have their number one back between the sticks.
Injuries are an occupational hazard for any footballer, and some might argue you can't enjoy the full experience of top-flight football until you have felt the misery of a long-term injury and the sheer euphoria of the return.
Of course Kasper's father Peter (an infinitely better keeper, by the way) would have schooled him in the arts of football survival. Considering the way Leicester have been defending this season, that may come in very handy.
I was very tempted to select Bournemouth's Simon Francis at right-back, but I was so impressed with Manchester United's comeback that I had to go for Antonio Valencia.
The game against Middlesbrough was going away from United and they needed a few cool heads to see them through. If there is one player they can count on, it's Valencia. The full-back is as safe as houses.
Valencia was one of those players who shut the game down for United once they got their noses in front.
In the final minutes, Valencia had no hesitation launching the ball into the crowd in order to relieve the pressure and kill the game. Sometimes even exceptional defenders can't afford to be too proud to do what needs be done.
What a thumping header by the Chelsea captain.
Victory over Stoke made it 13 consecutive wins for the Blues and there was a touch of inevitability about the outcome of this match. Did anyone really believe Stoke could pull this off?
To be fair, the Potters went to Stamford Bridge and gave the Blues a game and were even the better side in the early exchanges, but there was only one winner.
It's not common for Stoke to concede goals from a corner but the way in which a Chelsea quartet descended upon Cesc Fabregas' beautiful floated corner was like the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
I've never before seen a Stoke defence bulldozed down like that on a set-play. It was Cahill who scored the goal but it was Chelsea's heavy mob that contributed to Stoke's total destruction.
It has been some time since Wes Morgan made my team of the week. Last season he was practically ever-present, but Leicester's preoccupation with the Champions League seems to have created a Premier League paralysis.
However, against a stubborn West Ham they managed a rare clean sheet, which was the basis upon which last season's title success.
Claudio Ranieri's celebration at the end of this fixture was telling enough, and without these three points Leicester would have been in big trouble.
Morgan's contribution was central to their clean sheet and it was just as well.
James Milner is making me eat my words. When I saw him in Liverpool's worst performance of the season against Burnley, I accused the England man of being a square peg in a round hole.
A right-footed midfield player playing left-back? He looked awkward and was exposed.
Admittedly his team-mates weren't much help that day, but since then he has grown into the part beautifully.
He has been Liverpool's best player during the past four games and never gave Manchester City's Raheem Sterling a kick on his return to Anfield.
In fact, the battle between Milner and Sterling was the highlight of the game for me. It was like a throwback to the 1970s, when you had players like George Best and Ron Harris going at it for 90 minutes, only without the brutality. I must admit, Jurgen Klopp has certainly got that one right.
It's been a great Christmas period for Paul Pogba. He was inspirational against Sunderland and a match-winner against Middlesbrough.
Please don't think for one minute that his header against Boro that gave United all three points was easy. He didn't panic and steered the ball in the only place Victor Valdes could not retrieve it.
I've seen those last-ditch efforts float wide of the post all too often, but Pogba absolutely nailed it. He's getting there.
The finish with his left foot was brilliant and the one he scored with his right was even better.
Chelsea had just conceded for the second time in this match against Stoke but on each occasion the Blues raised their game. The touch from Diego Costa that set up Willian to score his first goal was sensational, but the Brazilian still had much to do and did it with calculated precision.
However, it was Fabregas who cut Stoke's throats with a glorious through ball for Willian, who smashed it past visiting goalkeeper Lee Grant.
Liverpool boss Klopp and Manchester City counterpart Pep Guardiola spent the week stroking each other's artichokes prior to their meeting at Anfield, but neither of them can hold a candle to Antonio Conte and what he is doing with Willian and company at the moment.
Winning at Southampton was a very impressive performance by West Brom and in particular Matt Phillips, who is having an excellent season.
He took his goal brilliantly and from that moment there was no coming back for the Saints.
It's been a miserable holiday period for Southampton since their controversial defeat by Tottenham and they never really looked like they had recovered from that mauling in time for the match against the Baggies.
What Tony Pulis has going at The Hawthorns is nothing short of miraculous. The purchase of Phillips has been inspired.
Dele Alli is officially 'in the mood'. Just like the old Glenn Miller classic, the player looks upbeat and gets you on your feet.
From the moment he struck the bar with a cracking drive, I knew he was up for the Tottenham game at Watford.
To be fair, this performance against a poor Hornets side was a continuation of his display against Southampton.
Spurs have been desperate for someone to share the goalscoring responsibilities with Harry Kane, and Alli has duly obliged. We've now got to get him playing for England the way he is playing for Spurs.
Harry Kane is back to his best again and he hasn't been looking like that for a while.
The first signs of a more relaxed, but purposeful, Kane were against Southampton and he would have capped an excellent performance that night had the earth not moved beneath his feet as he was about to take a penalty.
His all-round display against Watford was fantastic, not to mention his two goals. I have had a real dilemma this weekend having seen Diego Costa play one of his best games for Chelsea, Kane playing like he's finally put the European Championship behind him and Andre Gray scoring his first hat-trick.
I couldn't have had three more exciting candidates. Sadly, Costa has hit the cutting-room floor but somebody had to.
It is good to see Andre Gray playing football and scoring goals again.
I was more than a little perturbed by the severity of the punishment imposed by the Football Association for his inappropriate Twitter remarks four years earlier. How sad that the governing body had no room for redemption.
Much has changed since those remarks and an extremely apologetic Gray seems far more mature than he was four years ago but, nevertheless, he took his medicine like a man. He took his goals against Sunderland in a similar fashion too. | The festive football action keeps coming, with no sign of the Chelsea juggernaut slowing down. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Allegations emerged last week that Australian officials had paid people-smugglers who were taking 65 asylum seekers to New Zealand to return the boat and its passengers to Indonesia.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has refused to confirm or deny the allegations but, if true, the country's international standing and its relations with Indonesia would be put at risk, say experts.
Indonesia could perhaps take action against Australia under the 2000 United Nations Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, says Australian National University law professor Donald Rothwell.
However he thinks that unlikely given it had not done so after several incursions by Australian navy vessels into Indonesian waters in recent years as part of border security policy.
"To date, Indonesia has not shown much inclination for (legal action), especially in the context of more egregious breaches of Indonesian sovereignty," he says.
However, paying people-smugglers to return refugees to Indonesia could put more strain on an already fractious relationship between the two countries.
Diplomatic relations sank to a new low in April after Indonesia ignored repeated Australian requests to spare the lives of two Australian drug-traffickers on death row.
Professor Rothwell says Indonesia might now be less inclined to help Australia combat people-smuggler activities.
On the domestic front, it is unclear whether such a policy would be in breach of Australian law.
The Australian Greens have written to the Australian Federal Police asking them to investigate what laws have been violated. Some experts suggest the alleged policy would be a breach of the provisions of the Criminal Code outlawing people smuggling.
However, they note that the government itself would have to initiate and investigate any charges.
But it would also depend on the circumstances, according to Professor Rothwell. He says Australian immigration and border security officials have been given "a fair degree of discretion" under wide-ranging maritime and migration laws introduced by the current government to support its "stop the boats" policy.
Legalities aside, the government must come clean with the Australian and international communities by confirming, denying or investigating whether Australian officials made the payments, leading refugee lawyer David Manne told the BBC.
"As a matter of fundamental democratic accountability, the government must disclose to the Australian and international communities, firstly, whether it is now Australian policy to pay people-smugglers to turn back asylum seekers and, secondly, did it do so," says Mr Manne.
"This type of conduct is likely to seriously harm Australia's reputation, credibility and authority on the international stage," he says, adding that if every country followed Australia's lead the international refugee protection framework "would collapse".
'No evidence'
Barrister, human rights and refugee advocate Julian Burnside said it would be "politically scandalous" if the allegation was correct, particularly given the government's hard-line rhetoric towards people-smugglers.
"A person with any sense of decency will not provide money to someone they regard as 'scum of the earth'," he says.
He warns such a policy could backfire on the government's efforts to stop people-smuggling "because they would reckon they would be in with a chance to get paid by the Australian government as well as by their passengers".
Mr Burnside says he has no evidence beyond what is in the public domain about whether the allegations are true. But he says that "as a person familiar with the forensic process of deciding facts, the prime minister's repeated refusal to come to grips with the question suggests strongly it was done".
"[The prime minister] was asked again and again and again whether it happened and he never directly answered it. Instead, he said: 'We've stopped the boats, we'll do anything 'by hook or by crook to stop the boats' ... If that was in front of a jury, the jury would find 'yes, it happened'." | Paying people-smugglers to turn back asylum seekers may not be in breach of Australian law but it could put vulnerable people at risk of further harm and encourage more people-smuggling, according to legal experts. |
Summarize the content provided below. | The call comes after Private Eye magazine had a freedom of information (FOI) request turned down by the Met.
The Met has yet to comment, but reportedly turned down the FOI request to "safeguard national security".
Sheila Coleman, of the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, called for police to show "transparency" and admit spying.
Private Eye asked the Met for files it held on the Hillsborough Justice Campaign and the Hillsborough Family Support Group following claims Special Branch officers were involved in surveillance of the organisations.
It reported that police would neither confirm nor deny that it held any papers on the disaster.
Both the justice campaign and the support group have been at the forefront of attempts to discover what happened at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final which saw the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans.
Fresh inquests into their deaths will begin in Warrington in March after the original accidental death inquest verdicts were quashed in 2012 following an independent report.
Louise Brookes lost her brother Andrew Mark Brookes in the disaster and she alleges she has had her post intercepted or tampered with.
She said: "Everything to do with Hillsborough would arrive opened."
Meanwhile, Ms Coleman claimed campaigners' phones were "definitely tapped".
She said: "I represented six families in 1993 and we were aware we were under surveillance.
"A lot of attempts were made to frighten us but it just went with the territory.
"It was appalling. Not so much for me but those who had been bereaved were effectively criminalised.
"I'm disappointed that the government acknowledged a state cover-up but the Met are still holding back."
She said families and campaigners for Hillsborough have been "promised transparency and accountability and the Met should fall into line with that".
Ninety-five victims were crushed to death in Britain's worst sporting disaster, on 15 April 1989, at Sheffield Wednesday's Hillsborough stadium during Liverpool's FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest.
The 96th victim died in 1993 when the Law Lords ruled that doctors could stop tube-feeding and hydration.
As well as fresh inquests, there are two ongoing investigations into the disaster.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is examining police actions at and after the tragedy, while former Durham Chief Constable Jon Stoddart is looking at the causes of the tragedy and the deaths and examining the actions of a range of organisations and bodies, including South Yorkshire Police.
The IPCC said it was not actively pursuing allegations of spying on families and campaigners.
But a spokesman said: "We are reviewing all material in relation to Hillsborough and clearly if we came across any evidence that this had happened we would investigate it whether or not we have received a complaint."
They were found "laying on and within pallets of broccoli lined with a thin sheet of ice", US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said in a statement.
The temperature inside the truck was 49F (9.5C), and it was padlocked shut with "no means of escape".
Nobody was hurt and the driver was arrested on human smuggling charges.
The CBP reports that the 60 people discovered on Saturday come from Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador and Honduras.
They were transported to the Falfurrias Border Patrol Station for deportation processing after being discovered by a sniffer dog.
Several of the migrants wore hooded jackets and trousers as they lay on the ice.
Rio Grande Valley Sector Chief Manuel Padilla Jr warned of "serious consequences for truck drivers who engage in smuggling".
Last month, 10 migrants died after they were locked inside a truck in Texas.
That truck, which was discovered abandoned in a sweltering San Antonio Walmart car park, may have contained nearly 100 people, officials estimate.
Several migrants fled the scene after officials prised open the truck door.
Pressure group Stonewall put the authority in first place in its 2014 Education Equality Index.
It also praised the council's work with local charity the Allsorts Youth Project.
The charity delivers anti-homophobic bullying sessions in secondary and primary schools.
Richard Chamberlain is the assistant head teacher at Blatchington Mill School, which was also praised by Stonewall for its student equality conference earlier this year.
"We've done a huge amount of work in school and I know other schools across the authority are doing this work as well supported by Allsorts and Stonewall.
"It's just really great to get that recognition." | Relatives of Liverpool fans killed in the Hillsborough disaster have called on the Metropolitan Police to answer claims officers spied on them.
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Sixty undocumented migrants from Central America were discovered locked inside a food truck by US officials as they tried to cross the border.
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The top local authority in the country for tackling homophobic bullying in schools has been named as Brighton and Hove City Council. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | He also promised "to prioritise refugee claims made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual's country of nationality".
The executive order imposed a cap of 50,000 on the number of refugees for 2017, less than half of the 110,000 admissions that President Obama planned.
Has the number of refugees in the US and, in particular, those from Syria, risen in recent years?
The number of refugees admitted to the US over the past 10 years has fluctuated, from the low of 48,282 in 2007, to the high of 84,995 in 2016.
In the first three months of the new financial year, a total of 25,671 were admitted.
In 2016, of the nearly 85,000 refugees admitted, the highest number - 16,370 - arrived from DR Congo, followed by Syria with 12,587 and Myanmar (Burma) with 12,347.
The number of Muslim refugees who entered the US in 2016 was 38,901, making up almost half (46%) of the total, according the the Pew Research report from October 2016.
The report says this is the highest number of Muslim refugees in any year since data on self-reported religious affiliations first became publicly available in 2002.
Between 2011, when the conflict in Syria started, and 2015, the US admitted a relatively small number of Syrian refugees - a total of 201. In 2015 the number increased to 1,682 and in 2016 to 12,587, bringing the total, since the start of the war, to 14,470.
By comparison, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees' latest figures show that the highest number of refugees from Syria since the start of the crisis was taken by Turkey with 2.9 million, Lebanon with one million and Jordan, which took 655,000.
In the same period, the EU took 844,000 Syrians, according to Eurostat, with more than half of the total admitted by Germany.
There have been big differences in the number of refugees arriving year-on-year in the US over the past four decades: from the peak of 207,116 in 1980 to the lowest of 27,131 in 2002.
In total, since 1975, the US has admitted about 3.4 million refugees. Its current population is about 323 million.
Read more from Reality Check | On 28 January, President Trump signed an executive order, which, among other things, indefinitely bans Syrian refugee arrivals as well as all other refugees for 120 days. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | Tribute band, The Cornish Wurzells, released their song Drink Up Yer Scrumpy as an mp3 download in November.
Keyboard player Terry Pascoe, who also played in the Wurzels in the 1980s, said no-one had bought a copy.
The group wants to raise £40,000 for a statue to be erected in Mr Cutler's home town of Nailsea, North Somerset.
"We've not had a single download from either iTunes or Amazon," said Mr Pascoe.
"But we're not quitters, we'll let it run its course and review it in a year's time."
He said the idea for a life-sized bronze statue may have to be abandoned if not enough money is raised.
The Wurzels had hits with songs such as Combine Harvester and I Am A Cider Drinker in the 1970s.
"Without Adge there would be no Combine Harvester or Cider Drinker," said Mr Pascoe.
"He was a quality writer, there's alliteration in his songs - all the things you find in classic English language."
Adge Cutler died in a car crash at the age of 42 in 1974. | A song released to raise money for a tribute statue to the late frontman of the Wurzels, Adge Cutler, has failed to sell a single copy. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Some 374 overweight soccer fans were invited to take part in a 12-week programme of training sessions at their local football club.
A year later, the men had lost and kept off about 11lb (5kg) each compared with 374 overweight fans put on a waiting list for the programme.
The Glasgow researchers say it proves male-friendly weight loss plans work.
All 748 men in the study were offered healthy-eating advice and tips on weight management, but only half were invited to professional football clubs for weekly training sessions.
Thirteen clubs took part: Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee United, Dunfermline Athletic, Hamilton Academical, Heart of Midlothian, Hibernian, Inverness Caledonian Thistle, Kilmarnock, Motherwell, Rangers, St Johnstone and St Mirren.
As well as losing weight when they were on the 12-week programme, nearly 40% of men who participated in the programme maintained a weight loss of at least 5% of their original body weight 12 months later.
Co-author Prof Kate Hunt, from Glasgow University, said: "Weight management and dieting are often wrongly viewed as women's issues, meaning that some men do not want to take part in existing weight management programmes."
But given the right circumstances, men are also keen to slim, she says.
"Participants really enjoyed being with other men like them, with a shared interest in football and similar health issues to address. They loved having the opportunity to spend time at the club, using parts of the stadium that they couldn't ordinarily access.
"And they appreciated the chance to be encouraged, trained, and informed by the club's coaches. This model has real potential for the future." | Football participation is a good way to get men to slim down, a Scottish study published in The Lancet shows. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | The 24-year-old went missing after leaving a nightclub in Glasgow on 11 April. Her body was found four days later at a farm near Milngavie.
Ms Buckley's father John said the family was "grateful" for the support shown during "this terrible time".
Alexander Pacteau, 21, from Glasgow, has been charged with her murder.
Ms Buckley's parents, John and Marian, travelled to Scotland from Cork after she disappeared and said they were touched by the support they had received.
In a statement issued through the Irish Examiner, Mr Buckley said: "We are very grateful for all the support and messages of sympathy we received from so many people from all over Scotland at this terrible time for our family.
"People have been extremely helpful to us right from the moment we discovered that Karen was missing.
"We would like to thank everybody in Scotland who helped us in any way.
Mr Buckley said: "People have been very good to us and it means a lot.
"The Scottish police were wonderful and very professional right through it all.
He said some police officers "took the trouble to travel to Ireland for Karen's funeral", and added: "It was a very kind and thoughtful thing to do."
A major police search was launched when Ms Buckley was reported missing by friends on Sunday 12 April when she failed to return after leaving a nightclub in Glasgow's west end the previous night.
The 24-year-old's body was found at High Craigton Farm, near Milngavie, East Dunbartonshire, following a four-day search.
Following the discovery, about 300 people attended a vigil in Glasgow's George Square in April, including her parents.
Ms Buckley, a qualified nurse, moved to Scotland in February and was studying occupational therapy at Glasgow Caledonian University.
Mr Buckley said: "We will never forget the huge outpouring of support and sympathy we got when we were in Scotland, it was incredible.
"We want to thank everybody who took part in the search for Karen and the hundreds of people who turned out for the vigil in George Square.
"We are extremely upset that Karen will never have the chance to live out her life, travel more and pursue her career in occupational therapy.
"That maybe someday she could have a family of her own and enjoy a happy and eventful life, which is what she would have wanted.
"We are still in shock and disbelief and it sometimes feels like all of this isn't real."
Mr Pacteau is also accused of attempting to defeat the ends of justice.
He made no plea or declaration when he made his second appearance at Glasgow Sheriff Court in April and was remanded in custody. | The family of murdered Irish student Karen Buckley have thanked people in Scotland for their "huge outpouring of support and sympathy". |
What is the summary of the given information? | Helen Thomas, from Newcastle Emlyn, died aged 22 after being struck by a police vehicle in 1989.
A bench was dedicated in her memory in the town centre on Sunday.
Women from across the UK camped outside the Berkshire airbase during the 1980s and 1990s to protest at nuclear missiles being sited there.
Mayor Hazel Evans said the town council wanted to honour her memory and her commitment to peace.
The bench is by the town clock in Newcastle Emlyn.
Members of Miss Thomas's family joined the service along with prominent peace campaigners from Wales.
Folk singer Dafydd Iwan who wrote a song about Miss Thomas was also taking part.
Before the ceremony, Mrs Evans said: "Last year it was the 21st anniversary of her death and there was a service at Greenham Common.
"She was born and went to school in Newcastle Emlyn and her family still have a business here.
"We felt it was appropriate to remember her fight against nuclear weapons."
Following her death, Miss Thomas's family challenged the verdict of accidental death at the High Court but the judge refused to re-open the inquest.
The first Cruise missiles were delivered to Greenham Common in November 1983. The last one was removed in March 1991.
During the height of the protests, thousands of women blocked the entrances to the base, cut through perimeter fences and formed human chains around the site.
The airbase was closed in 1993 but the peace camp remained until 2000. | A memorial has been unveiled to a Carmarthenshire woman who died while taking part in the Greenham Common peace protests. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | A TV ad and poster received 63 complaints over claims it "hydrates and fuels you better than water".
The drink's former makers, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), said that two health claims for this kind of drink, a carbohydrate-electrolyte solution, had been authorised by the European Union.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) said the claims were not accurately reflected in the adverts.
They have ruled the adverts can no longer appear in their current form.
The television advert showed two groups of men, one drinking water and the other Lucozade Sport, running on treadmills while being monitored by technicians.
A voiceover then said: "At the limits of your ability, you need to replace the electrolytes you lose in sweat, keep your body hydrated, give your body fuel.
"Lucozade Sport gives you the electrolytes and carbohydrates you need, hydrating you, fuelling you better than water."
The poster featured an image of a professional rugby player and stated: "Hydrates and fuels you better than water."
GSK, which sold Lucozade and Ribena to Japanese firm Suntory for £1.35bn last September, said the adverts represented the authorised claim "carbohydrate-electrolyte solutions enhance the absorption of water during physical exercise".
The company also said it "strongly believed" that people would realise that Lucozade Sport provided calorific energy, mostly from carbohydrates, whereas water has none and could not therefore be said to provide "fuel" at all.
"Common sense dictated that the claim should be acceptable, because consumers were unlikely to misunderstand it," they added.
The ASA said the campaign did not make it clear that the benefits of the drink would only be got during prolonged endurance exercise.
They added: "Even if we had accepted that 'fuels' was an acceptable rewording of the authorised claim 'contributes to the maintenance of endurance performance during prolonged endurance exercise', we noted that that claim did not make any comparison with water, and we therefore considered that it would not have been acceptable for GSK to state that the product 'fuels ... better than water'."
One of the 63 complaints came from the Natural Hydration Council, a body which represents bottled water sellers.
Their general manager, Kinvara Carey, said: "We are pleased with the decision by the ASA to uphold our complaint regarding the high-profile Lucozade Sport advertising campaign.
"There is already much confusion over the role of sports drinks and for the majority of people participating in exercise and sporting activities, water is all that is needed for effective hydration."
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter | An advertising campaign for the drink Lucozade Sport has been banned. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Whereas a week ago the Republican convention was rather light on highlights - and some of them, such as Texas Senator Ted Cruz's non-endorsement, were negative - the Democrats rolled out a series of the party's marquee stars.
They all praised Hillary Clinton and took swipes at Donald Trump, but did it with their own particular rhetorical style.
Here's how it went down, complete with the most memorable anti-Trump lines.
He is good at this. He's really, really good at this.
For all his flaws - and conservatives will be quick to point them out - he's always been able to deliver a pitch-perfect speech on the biggest stages, and this was no exception.
In 2004 he burst on to the national scene at the Democratic National Convention with his poetic "One America" speech.
For eight years, he governed largely in prose. In what was his valedictory address at the 2016 convention, he bookended his national political career with more poetry.
Mr Obama took advantage of two openings that Mr Trump gave him in the Republican's acceptance speech last Thursday. He successfully claimed the optimistic high ground, giving a speech heavy in praise for American ideals.
"The America I know is full of courage, and optimism, and ingenuity," he said. "The America I know is decent and generous."
It was the kind of speech that had some conservatives shaking their heads, wondering how their party ceded the optimistic high ground to their opponents. Mr Obama even quoted Ronald Reagan's "shining city on a hill" line, if only to make the political shift all the more clear.
Mr Obama also offered a direct response to Mr Trump's questioning whether the president regretted naming Mrs Clinton secretary of state.
"For four years, I had a front-row seat to her intelligence, her judgment, and her discipline," he said of his former Democratic rival. "I came to realize that her unbelievable work ethic wasn't for praise or attention - that she was in this for everyone who needs a champion."
On Thursday Mrs Clinton takes the stage to claim the nomination the Democratic Party has given her. The speakers tonight laid the groundwork for this moment before a national audience. Now Americans will learn whether she's up to the challenge.
Memorable anti-Trump line: "Anyone who threatens our values, whether fascists or communists or jihadists or homegrown demagogues, will always fail in the end."
It was a sweet mercy that Democrats broke with tradition and kept the Virginia senator out of the closing spot on Wednesday night's speaking list. He never could have competed with Mr Obama's soaring rhetoric.
The most pressing task for Mr Kaine - as it is for many newly minted vice-presidential candidates - was to introduce himself to the nation. He did that by talking about his son, a Marine, displaying his Spanish fluency and describing the role he played as governor after the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting.
He also had to show he could fulfill the traditional attack-dog role for the presidential running mate - and he dutifully performed his assignment.
"You know who I don't trust?" Mr Kaine asked. "Donald Trump. The guy promises a lot. But you might have noticed, he has a habit of saying the same two words right after he makes his biggest promises."
Then the man raised in Missouri launched into what may be the most mid-western-sounding impersonation of New Yorker Trump ever recorded.
"Believe me!" he shouted, to audience laughter.
He went on to list Mr Trump's promises - from a border wall to his foreign policy and promised unremarkableness of his not-yet released tax returns.
If he stumbled, it was only because his speech ran long - pushing Mr Obama's closing speech into the very edge of prime-time on the East Coast.
Memorable anti-Trump line: "Hillary's passion is kids and families. Donald Trump has a passion too: It's himself."
The former head of the largest city in the US contemplated a presidential bid of his own earlier this year, using his billions to run as an independent. Instead, he spoke to an arena packed with Democrats - and urged independent voters to back Mrs Clinton.
His pro-Clinton pitch was simple and direct.
"Together, let's elect a sane and competent person," he said.
It wasn't exactly a rousing endorsement, and he said the former secretary of state was "not flawless", but he asserted that she was the best choice out there.
In many ways Mr Bloomberg came at Mr Trump from the elite, business-oriented middle - a reprise of the anti-Trump speech former Republican nominee Mitt Romney gave in March, only delivered in a nasal Boston accent.
It's the kind of pitch that will likely bounce off Mr Trump's blue-collar supporters, but it could help sway the suburban conservatives who are uneasy with the Republican nominee's populist rhetoric.
Memorable anti-Trump line: "Truth be told, the richest thing about Donald Trump is his hypocrisy."
Blue-collar Joe has always been a favourite of Democratic audiences, with an aw-shucks East Coast Catholic shtick that he can roll out on cue. He offered a heavy dose of it on Wednesday night
He said Mr Trump's expressions of concern about the middle class were "a bunch of malarkey".
The vice-president is at his most powerful, however, when talking about the personal - and nothing has been more personal, or as compelling, as the death of his son, Beau. And, as he often does, it turned it into a tribute to working class values and persistence in the face of adversity.
"They get up every morning, every day," he said. "They put one foot in front of the other, they keep going. That is the unbreakable spirit of the people of America. That is who we are."
Mr Obama added Mr Biden to his ticket in 2008 to appeal to the slice of the electorate that was cool to his particular style - the white, middle-class voters in Pennsylvania and the industrial Midwest.
Mr Biden helped deliver those states to Mr Obama twice. Now he tried to make one more pitch for them to support Mrs Clinton - although it's a group of voters that has shown a strong interest in Mr Trump's unique political brand.
Memorable anti-Trump line: "He has no clue about what makes America great. Actually, he has no clue period." | If the Democratic nomination was a baseball line-up, then Wednesday night was the heart of the batting order, with all the heavy hitters taking their turn at the plate. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | Connor Cain, of Poplar Road, Herne Hill, London, admitted possessing class A drugs with intent to supply.
A CT scan revealed the drugs package "shaped like a potato" in his rectum after doctors had worked to stem the bleeding from knife wounds to his legs and abdomen.
Cain was jailed three years and six months by Recorder Mr John Williams.
Exeter Crown Court heard Cain only survived because the attack in the centre of the city was close enough to the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital that doctors were able to stem the flow of blood and save him.
Mr Nigel Wraith, prosecuting, said ambulance paramedics were called to a flat in Lower Summerlands, Exeter, in April and found Cain with multiple knife wounds.
Mr Wraith said: "During the course of medical examination a CT scan revealed a package secreted in his rectum which was removed by a medical procedure and measured four by two inches. It was shaped like a potato."
The package contained 156 wraps in all, 95 with street value of £1,900 and 61 of heroin with value of £1,220.
The court heard Cain was already on a suspended sentence for dealing in cocaine.
Recorder Williams said: "You had the drugs inside your body when you were subjected to a horrifying attack in which you received life threatening wounds and were fortunate to have survived, no doubt as a result of the efforts of the doctors and paramedics."
The court heard police are still hunting Cain's attackers and investigating whether the stabbing was linked to the activities of rival London gangs on the streets of Exeter.
Media playback is unsupported on your device
2 July 2015 Last updated at 16:24 BST
But don't despair. As Ikenna Azuike and his team take a well-earned break, we have put together the best bits of series 2. Enjoy!
What's Up Africa is a BBC and RNW Media co-production | A drugs courier who was stabbed 15 times was then found to have secreted drugs worth £3,000 in his rectum.
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If you are a fan of our ground-breaking satire show What's Up Africa, you may have been sad when our second series ended a couple of weeks ago. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | The remains of an exercise bike and a burnt-out washing machine are visible in the shocking image from inside the tower block.
A similar picture features on the front of the Daily Record, alongside the headline "There's nothing left".
It says the photographs were released by a specialist police recovery team working to find the bodies of the missing. Police say at least 58 people died in the tragedy.
The Scottish Daily Express reports fears of a "cover-up", with former Labour minister David Lammy calling on Scotland Yard to seize vital documents relating to the devastating blaze.
The start of Brexit negotiations is the focus of several front pages, with The Herald reporting that the Conservatives are facing a "bitter internal battle".
The Scotsman reports that David Davis will lead a nine-strong negotiating team to Brussels, calling for a deal "like no other in history".
And the Daily Telegraph claims that the Brexit secretary is being tipped as the next Tory leader.
The economic impact of Brexit is examined by The National, which claims the move could cost up to 80,000 jobs in Scotland over 10 years.
Ian Duncan, the Conservative candidate who lost out on a Westminster seat by 21 votes in the general election, is to be made a lord, according to The Courier. The MEP will become Lord Duncan of Springbank and he will be installed in the Scotland Office, the paper reports.
A murder investigation in Fraserburgh leads the north-east edition of the Press and Journal. It reports that a man died following a "large-scale disturbance" in Fernie Place early on Sunday.
Britain's Got Talent host Ant McPartline features on the front page of The Scottish Sun and the Daily Star, after it emerged that he is being treated in a rehab facility for alcohol and drugs problems. | A simple headline - "Inside Hell" - accompanies a photograph of the charred remains of a Grenfell Tower flat on the front page of the Scottish Daily Mail. |
Please summarize the passage below. | The map was created by Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives using Civil Defence and Air Raid Precaution Records.
The creators said the Google Map showed the approximate areas of attack and damage.
It covers all the known attacks from 26 June 1940 until the last raid on 21 April 1943.
A second map shows enemy aircraft attacks recorded in the Aberdeen County Register of Air Raids and Alarms from 1940 - 1944.
The Scotland United Against Austerity event in George Square took place as a demonstration was staged in London.
Organisers of the London event said the protests would be the biggest for years.
The Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) joined forces with the Peoples' Assembly, which organised the protests.
Speaking at the rally, STUC general secretary Grahame Smith told BBC Scotland: "We know austerity does not work.
"It is not a sensible economic policy.
"It is entirely about ideology and it is about protecting the position of the already privileged in society."
The trade union leader added: "We have seen over the past few years the impact of austerity: growing queues at food banks; people being thrown out of their house because of the bedroom tax; and the unprecedented decline in real wages.
"But at the same time we have seen the rich getting richer. That's the impact of austerity and that's why we oppose it."
Mr Smith said the vast majority of the people in Scotland and across the UK did not vote for the Tory government and he questioned the legitimacy of its cuts.
Other speakers at the rally included Larry Flanagan, general secretary of the Educational Institute of Scotland, and Pat Rafferty, Scottish secretary of Unite.
The independent judge in the case adjourned for a week to review material provided by the Rugby Football League.
The hearing is set for Wednesday, 28 June and comes five weeks after Barba signed for the Super League club.
"The procedural process is proving to be inordinately long," said McManus.
"We were already bemused by the protracted period prior to being granted a tribunal hearing date.
"That has now been deferred further at the unilateral request of the RFL and without, in our opinion, good or valid reason."
Barba, who tested positive for cocaine just days after helping Cronulla win the NRL Grand Final last year, was a controversial signing on 24 May on a deal until 2019, after a short stint playing rugby union in France.
His cross-code move to France proved a contentious one for the 27-year-old - who was the NRL's player of the year in 2012 - as he escaped being sanctioned because the ban only applied to rugby league.
On Barba's return to rugby league with Saints, the RFL - who govern the Super League - sought clarity from the NRL about whether the ban was applicable outside the southern hemisphere competition.
The issue which the RFL has faced from the very beginning is not just about upholding an NRL-imposed suspension, but establishing that there is collaboration between the two competitions and that bans served in rugby league are recognised internationally.
In a statement on St Helens' website, McManus said: "We merely legitimately seek to appeal the discretionary decision of the RFL to adopt his 12-match suspension from the NRL.
"We consider that we have an extremely strong case."
If the ban was to stand, Barba will have served six matches by the time the appeal is heard and he will not be eligible to play until the fourth match of the Super 8s, which is likely to be in August.
The RFL originally requested the hearing be put back to allow Saints and the judge - who will head a three-member panel - time to review papers, which relate to cross-competition bans and drug suspension policies.
However, St Helens wanted a speedy conclusion and the RFL were willing to have the case heard as originally planned this week, only for the judge to then deny that request to allow more time to review material from both sides before hearing the case. | The sites of World War Two bombing raids in and around Aberdeen have been charted on an interactive map.
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Thousands of people have attended a rally in Glasgow to protest against austerity.
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St Helens' appeal against Ben Barba's 12-match suspension relating to an NRL drugs ban has been deferred for no "good or valid reason", according to club chairman Eamonn McManus. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | Over 30 other staff members were detained whilst gunmen raided the office of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Donetsk.
The raid led to the IRC halting its aid work in Ukraine.
IRC President David Miliband said that aid workers "should never be targeted" and that the raid was an "affront to the IRC's principles".
In a statement the former UK foreign secretary said that the two men were healthy and in a safe location, before condemning their captors.
"The actions taken by the security forces of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, including the intimidation of our dedicated humanitarian staff, are an affront to those principles. Every day, the world's humanitarian workers show great courage, taking risks help the most vulnerable in crisis situations. They should never be targeted."
The masked gunmen seized 37 IRC workers on 29 April. Five international members of staff from Canada, Britain, Georgia and Chile were forced to leave rebel-controlled territory, in eastern Ukraine.
However two US workers were held by officials apparently working for the the self-declared People's Republic of Donetsk Ministry of State Security.
On the day of the raid Russia's Interfax news agency cited a DPR security ministry spokesman accusing the IRC of concealing "eavesdropping equipment" in their Donetsk office.
The spokesman claimed that "foreigners regularly travelled to Ukraine, but not in order to accompany [the IRC on] humanitarian missions".
"Foreign employees established contact with officials in DPR ministries and agencies, showing interest in obtaining information about the situation in the republic," he said.
He also accused the agency of "hiring DPR citizens for work without signing agreements with them, evading the payment of taxes into the DPR budget".
Heavily armed rebels have been fighting government forces for a year in Ukraine's Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
The West says Russia has armed the rebels and sent in regular soldiers - an accusation echoed by independent experts. Moscow insists that any Russians on the rebel side are volunteers. | Pro-Russian separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine have freed two American aid workers seized 10 days ago. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | The Briton jumped 8.31m in round two of the event, the same mark he achieved to claim gold at London 2012.
American Marquise Goodwin was second with 8.19m, just ahead of Australia's Fabrice Lapierre, who jumped 8.18m.
After his win, Rutherford, who remains unbeaten in 2016, hinted he may pull out of Sunday's Birmingham Diamond League to rest his body.
He is unhappy with changes to the Diamond League competition that mean four athletes contest the closing stages rather than eight.
With less recovery time between jumps, Rutherford said athletes were "incredibly frustrated", adding: "You can't perform."
He also hinted he may pull out of Birmingham to "preserve the body".
The Birmingham event, which is live on BBC One from 13:30 BST, is expected to feature 21 world champions.
London 2012 bronze medallist Robbie Grabarz, who is expected to compete in Birmingham, jumped 2.30m to come second in the high jump.
It was a best outdoor height for the the Briton since 2013, but he fell short of Ukrainian Bohdan Bondarenko's effort of 2.33m.
American Justin Gatlin won the 100m in a non-Diamond League race, clocking a season's best of 9.93 seconds to edge out compatriot Ameer Webb (9.94).
Ethiopia's Almaz Ayana missed out of the women's 5,000m world record by just over a second, clocking 14 minutes 12.59 seconds. | Olympic long jump champion Greg Rutherford produced a season's best to win the Diamond League meeting in Rome. |
Summarize the provided information. | The African sides were level at 1-1 on 88 minutes when a handful of fans broke onto the pitch, with one appearing to rugby tackle Senegal's Lamine Gassama.
Players ran from the pitch and referee Tony Chapron opted to end the fixture.
Liverpool's Sadio Mane had given Senegal a second-half lead from the penalty spot but Bi Gohi Cyriac levelled three minutes later.
L'Equipe journalist Herve Penot was in the ground and told BBC World Service the incident "could have been very serious".
He added: "I wouldn't say the people were violent, it was much more about trying to be with the players. But you never know what can happen, the organisation was a disaster, it was incredible.
"After 20-30 minutes a couple of people were on the pitch, then they couldn't start the second-half because they had people on the pitch and the referee said if it happens again he will stop the game. It was very messy."
Local media reported a group of supporters jumped over perimeter fencing at Charlety Stadium moments before the pitch invasion started.
It is the second time in five years that a game between the two countries has been called off because of crowd disturbances.
Senegal were disqualified from the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations when a riot led to a playoff between the sides being abandoned. | A friendly match between Ivory Coast and Senegal was abandoned when fans invaded the pitch in Paris. |
Please summarize the given passage. | In May it was revealed 26 former residents of the Beechwood home in Mapperley, Nottingham, had been awarded a total of £250,000 in compensation.
The city council said the claims were settled without an admission of liability but confirmed there were a "significant number" of other claims.
Now it has emerged these relate to 12 other care homes and secure units.
In 2010 Nottinghamshire Police launched Operation Daybreak, an investigation into allegations of abuse at Beechwood from the 1960s to 2000.
By last year this had widened to include four other homes in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.
Now Nottingham City Council has confirmed compensation claims have been received in relation to 13 centres.
Nottinghamshire Police said it was actively investigating five homes with another four facing no further action.
The disclosures follow a BBC Freedom of Information request.
Officers also confirmed 10 men had been arrested with seven released with no further action; two on bail and still being investigated on suspicion of rape and that one man had since died during its investigation over rape allegations.
(Key: *Compensation claims, +Under police investigation)
Former resident Mickey Summers is at the centre of a campaign to reveal what went on. He has already been told his records were destroyed in the late 1970s.
He said: "I feel disgusted and let down. I believe the police weren't interested. It's the same old thing, they think a little boy crying wolf and associate kids in children's homes with attention seeking.
"I feel like they've abused me for the last 10 years. I want someone made accountable. I don't care if individuals are deceased. Make someone corporately accountable. It's about justice and getting final closure."
Mr Summers complained to Nottinghamshire Police more than a decade ago but claims he was not taken seriously - a decision which will be reviewed by the Independent Police Complaints Commission.
A city council spokesman said they were trying to help Mr Summers get to the truth and had conducted an extensive search for his records and their destruction was due to the lack of rules on keeping files at the time.
But they said they had apologised and were still trying to help him piece together what happened. | An investigation into abuse at a children's care home has been widened to include other establishments. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | Crues duo Jordan Owens and Paul Heatley (2) netted in a 3-2 comeback victory over Coleraine while Linfield eased to a 3-0 home win against Glenavon.
Portadown needed a win to maintain hopes of staying up but they lost 3-2.
Ballymena thumped Cliftonville 4-1, Dungannon beat the Mallards by the same score and Glentoran edged Carrick 2-1.
Tuesday night's Premiership action as it happened
Crusaders fought back to beat Cliftonville on Saturday and the champions repeated the feat in a pulsating game at Seaview.
A superb 30-yard strike from James McLaughlin put the Bannsiders in front but the hosts were soon level as Owens netted from Paul Heatley's cross.
Heatley made it 2-1 it five minutes before the break, firing a volley into the bottom corner after his initial attempt was saved by Chris Johns, and the winger added another in the second half.
Jamie McGonigle fizzed a shot into the bottom corner to set up a tense finale but the Crues held on for a vital win while bringing Coleraine's unbeaten run of 17 games to an end.
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Crusaders will win the Gibson Cup for a third straight season if they pick up maximum points from their final two games.
"I thought we dominated from start to finish, but they changed their shape a bit and began to pass the ball better, as they tend to do because Coleraine are a top side," said Crues boss Stephen Baxter.
"But sometimes you have to get a job done and that's what we did - I told the players a couple of weeks ago we had to step it up and we've had a real crack at it over the last two games. I have to be happy with that."
Linfield brushed aside Glenavon with three first-half goals as they maintained the pressure on the champions.
Aaron Burns slotted home a penalty, after Andrew Waterworth was fouled by keeper Jonathan Tuffey, and Mark Haughey headed in before a fine finish from Paul Smyth.
The other match in Section A saw Johnny McMurray's double helping Ballymena to an impressive Showgrounds win over the Reds.
The forward made it 2-0 after a Kyle Owens opener and Stephen Garrett pulled one back before Cathal Friel and McMurray goals sealed the three points.
It was a bleak night for Portadown, who needed to beat Ards and for Carrick to lose to continue their battle against the drop.
Davy McAllister gave Ards an early lead and Garry Breen headed in an equaliser before Matthew Shevlin and Guillaume Keke scored for the hosts.
Ards defender Stuart McMullan was sent-off for a foul that resulted in a penalty, which Callum Ferris converted, and Ports midfielder Sean Mackle was dismissed for dissent.
"I honestly believed we had a chance but I think tonight tells its own story because we had that many kids helping us out in a relegation dogfight," said Portadown manager Niall Currie.
"It's been a very unhappy time at the club for a long time, if I'm honest, but I'm lucky to have these supporters with me. A total rebuild is needed at the club."
Carrick are confirmed in the relegation play-off spot - TJ Murray gave the hosts a second-half lead at the Belfast Loughshore Hotel Arena before Jonathan Smith and Curtis Allen struck for the Glens.
Dungannon remained three points clear in seventh, which secures a Europa League play-off place, thanks to a comfortable win over Ballinamallard at Ferney Park.
Ryan Harpur put the Swifts in front and Warner Mullen's equaliser was followed by an Andy Mitchell double and Douglas Wilson header.
It was organised after attacks on homes in Walmer Street and Raby Street, off the Ormeau Road, earlier this week.
Residents, traders, politicians, clergy and community leaders attended the demonstration at Ulidia playing fields on Thursday evening.
Organisers said they wanted to show solidarity with the victims and make it clear that such incidents are not acceptable in their area. | Premierships leaders Crusaders stayed a point clear of Linfield after wins for the top two while Portadown were relegated following a defeat at Ards.
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About 50 people have staged a protest against hate crime in south Belfast. |
Write a summary of this document. | The champions top the table going into the New Year on goal difference only from Aberdeen, though with two games in hand.
"So far Aberdeen have done well and are a good football team," Deila said.
"I've said it all along that we'll have to wait till the end of March before we see what the title race will be like."
Deila hopes by that stage his team will have pulled away from the chasing pack.
''Hopefully it's just us, that's what we want and we have to do all we can to win every game," he said.
"The first one is on Saturday against Partick Thistle.''
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While acknowledging there is pressure on him and his players, Deila believes his squad's experience gives Celtic an edge over their domestic opponents.
"There is pressure on every team, you need consistency you need to be able to cope with the situation and have unbelievable discipline and we have experience of it," said the Norwegian.
"I want to look forward to the New Year. We have so much to play for I'm excited by it.
"I saw a lot of positive things against Hearts which I want to see more of. There was very good energy of the whole team and I want to see more of that on Saturday."
In 2015 Deila has enjoyed success in the Premiership and League Cup, but also endured failure in European competitions. He insists though that the year's end will not prompt him to reflect on the team's successes and failures.
''We are constantly evaluating things, so New Year is nothing special in that aspect," he said.
"It's all about small details like being more direct and getting in behind defences or pressing teams more. Small details can make things right."
13 January 2017 Last updated at 13:12 GMT
He got pretty upset when his fish and chip dish didn't go swimmingly.
But it wasn't all bad news for Oscar, who speaks Spanish after moving with his family to live in the country.
After being on the show, he was invited to cook for the British ambassador to Spain!
Check out the video to see his kitchen nightmare.
Peter Benstead, 72, of Crown Currency Exchange, was found dead in a car in a lay-by in Cornwall on 4 May last year.
The married father of three found the pressure of the trial "difficult to bear" and was "depressed and acutely confused" after suffering from a stroke, the inquest heard.
A conclusion of suicide was recorded.
Three others were jailed after the trial last year including Mr Benstead's son Julian, 46, who ran Crown Currency Exchange's sister company that specialised in trading cash for gold.
Julian Benstead was jailed for two and a half years for fraudulent trading while Mr Benstead's wife Susan was given a two-year suspended jail term for money laundering at Southwark Crown Court.
In a statement read to the inquest Mr Benstead's wife said he had disappeared from his home in Penzance one night. Police said he was found dead the next day in his car which was "full of overpowering fumes".
Mrs Benstead described how he left her a note written on kitchen towel in pink pen saying: "Sorry Susi but I love you. And this is the only way. Love you lots, Pete."
She said he had never talked about taking his own life.
The court case last year heard 12,500 people were left out of pocket when Crown Currency Exchange went under in October 2010. New clients' investments had been used to settle existing debts.
The judge said the evidence against Peter Benstead had been "overwhelming" but asked the jury not to return verdicts on the 10 counts of which he had been accused.
Mr Benstead's GP Dr Dan Rainbow told the inquest he had been on medication for stress but had refused offers of counselling. He said he had seemed "oddly relaxed" about the prospect of going to jail. | Celtic manager Ronny Deila believes it is too early to say which teams will be challenging for the Premiership title at the end of the season.
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Nine-year-old British boy Oscar was competing in the Spanish version of Junior Masterchef when it started to go wrong...
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The boss of a currency trading firm killed himself while under "enormous stress" on trial for a £20m fraud, an inquest has heard. |
Please summarize the passage below. | The figure represents an increase of 18% on the previous year.
The biggest rise was in car insurance. The number of dishonest motor claims rose by 34% to 59,900, attempting to cheat the industry out of £811m.
The ABI said fraud was now costing each household in the UK an extra £50 a year, through increased premiums.
So-called "crash for cash" car insurance scams helped to contribute to the record figures.
That is when fraudsters stage a car crash, for example by slamming their brakes on at a road junction, often having disabled the brake lights.
An unsuspecting motorist then crashes into the back of the first car.
The fraudsters have witnesses on hand to show that the crash was the other driver's fault, enabling them to make an insurance claim for the damage, as well as whiplash injuries.
In one case in County Durham last year, 60 people were convicted for one of the UK's largest "crash for cash" frauds.
As many as 25 accidents were staged in the Consett area, and resulted in local residents having to pay an extra £100 on their premiums.
In other cases a professional golfer claimed £8,000 for an injured knee, but was later filmed giving golf lessons.
A vet was also jailed for trying to claim £200,000 in connection with the "treatment" of non-existent pets.
However, while the value of attempted fraud went up, the number of fraudulent claims overall went down.
The scale of property insurance fraud also fell - down 38% by value on 2012.
The ABI says the recorded level of insurance fraud is increasing because more people are reporting it and more resources are being used to fight it.
The Insurance Fraud Enforcement Department, a specialist police unit, has helped to prosecute 85 people since it was established in 2011.
The industry also funds the Insurance Fraud Bureau (IFB), which was set up in 2006 to specifically tackle false motor policy claims.
It is currently investigating 110 "crash for cash" schemes across the country.
Malcolm Tarling of the ABI told BBC Radio 4's Today programme insurers were getting better at detecting fraudulent claims.
But he added: "Everyone pays for fraud. We estimate that across the country fraud adds £50 a year to the average family's insurance bill - that's £50 more than people should be paying.
"This is why the industry is investing over £230m a year in tackling fraud.
"The number of detected frauds is rising; that's because we are getting better at detecting staged accidents. We are going to continue to tackle fraud - that's what our honest customers expect us to do." | Fake car crashes helped to push the level of insurance fraud to a record £1.3bn in 2013, according to the Association of British Insurers (ABI). |
Can you summarize this content? | The pavilion is the final piece of a renovation project at the former Olympic venue [1948] that began in four years ago as part of the legacy project from the most recent London Games.
Since then, refurbishment of the main 450m track, the addition of a 250m junior track and new floodlights have helped double visitor numbers.
The Herne Hill track was where Sir Bradley Wiggins began his racing career, aged 12.
Hillary Peachey, chairman of the Herne Hill Velodrome Trust (HHVT), said: "It has been a long journey, but I am immensely proud of how the community came together, matched by the generosity of our funders, the project team and the local residents."
Alongside substantial contributions from the London Marathon Charitable Trust, Southwark Council and City Hall, Sport England provided £750,000 of Lottery funds towards construction, while a recent crowdfunding initiative organised by the Friends of the HHV raised £89,000 to fit out the pavilion.
The opening of the facility was attended by Brian Cookson, president of world cycling's governing body the UCI, plus dignitaries including former sport and Olympics minister Baroness Tessa Jowell, MP for Dulwich and West Norwood Helen Hayes, and London's Deputy Mayor for Transport Val Shawcross,
The velodrome hosts a range of activities for different ages and abilities, including dedicated sessions for young children, women, veterans (40+) and free drop-in sessions for the disabled through charity Wheels for Wellbeing. Visit the HHV website for details of times and pricing.
If you want to get involved in cycling, check out our Get Inspired guide.
The body of 25-year-old Conall Kerrigan from Claudy was discovered in Bank Place at around 22:20 BST on Sunday.
The police are treating his death as "unexplained."
They have appealed for anyone who may have seen him after he left the Metro Bar early on Sunday morning to contact them.
They also want to hear from people who may have noticed a fight on the city walls near the Millennium Forum.
The 25-year-old's cousin Aaron Kerrigan said he looked on him as a brother.
"If you look at his photos - just every single one of them he's smiling," he said.
"That's what he epitomised. He could bring a smile to anybody's face just by a look or a word.
"He was somebody I looked up to. It's just really difficult." | Visitors to the Herne Hill Velodrome in south London will have their experience enhanced by changing facilities and a club room as the new pavilion opened its doors on 30 March.
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The family of a man found dead in County Londonderry last night have said they are devastated at his death. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | The Royal Stoke University Hospital has been designated as a "gym" in the game where players can train their characters.
Fans of the game have been seen walking around the site.
The hospital says it was "unconcerned" as long as people played the game where it was safe. | A hospital has warned players of the game Pokemon Go not to enter the accident and emergency unit while they hunt for virtual monsters. |
Summarize the information given below. | A 43-year-old man was found at a house in Gomersal, near Cleckheaton, on Friday evening.
He was treated by paramedics but died at the property in Shirley Terrace, West Yorkshire Police said.
A 26-year-old man has been bailed pending further inquiries. A 47-year-old woman arrested on suspicion of murder remains in police custody.
Magistrates granted a 36-hour extension to continue questioning the suspect.
Police said the investigation was continuing and witnesses are urged to come forward. | A man arrested on suspicion of murder after the death of a man in West Yorkshire has been released on bail. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Azam Tariq died in Paktika province, near Pakistan's border. His son and nine others were also reported killed.
Tariq was a former Pakistani Taliban spokesman and part of a breakaway faction after the group split in 2014.
Many Pakistani Taliban now operate from Afghanistan after they were dislodged from strongholds in north-west Pakistan by a military offensive.
Reports say Afghan special forces backed by Nato troops killed Azam Tariq in the Barmal district of Paktika on Saturday night, but it took a day for his death to be confirmed.
Dawn newspaper reported that ground forces were backed by four helicopter gunships and two drones in a gun battle that went on for more than five hours.
Azam Tariq was chief spokesman for the Pakistan Taliban between 2009 and 2013, when Hakimullah Mehsud was leader.
After the latter's death in a drone strike, the movement split and Tariq became spokesman for a splinter faction led by Khan Said Sajna.
A spokesman for the Sajna group, Zeeshan Mehsud, telephoned journalists to confirm that Azam Tariq was dead.
He said the "matryrdom of Azam Tariq" was a cause of pride for the Mehsud tribesmen of South Waziristan.
He is the first prominent Pakistani Taliban leader to be killed in Afghanistan since the July 2016 killing of Hafiz Saeed Khan, the chief of so-called Islamic State for the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. | A leading Pakistani Taliban commander has been killed by special forces in eastern Afghanistan, the militants say. |
Can you summarize this content? | The girl had told investigators she was one of 270 abducted in Nigeria in 2014 by Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
She had explosives strapped to her body, had been drugged and was badly injured when she was arrested last week, Cameroonian officials say.
Boko Haram is increasingly using girls to carry out suicide bombings.
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari ordered a new investigation into the kidnappings in January, but admitted he had no information on the girls' whereabouts.
The abductions of the schoolgirls from Chibok town in north-eastern Nigeria sparked international outrage and the #BringBackOurGirls social media campaign.
While about 50 of the girls managed to escape, 219 of the girls remain missing.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has said some of the girls have been converted to Islam and forced to marry Boko Haram fighters.
There have been reports that some of them may have been forced to fight for the militant group, which is affiliated to Islamic State.
Although Boko Haram has been driven out from most of the areas it controlled in north-eastern Nigeria, it has continued to carry out suicide bombings and raids into neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Using football to tackle Boko Haram
Who are Boko Haram? | A senior Nigerian official has told the BBC that a would-be suicide bomber arrested in Cameroon is not one of the missing Chibok schoolgirls. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Mr Jones was appointed after "second choice" votes were taken into consideration.
Neither him nor UKIP's candidate, Victoria Ayling, gained the required 50% of the vote to win outright in the first round of counts.
The ex-Deputy Leader of Lincoln Council said he was "very pleased" to have been elected.
More on this and other Lincolnshire stories
Mr Jones, who was elected after gaining 48,033 votes in the the second round, said his biggest challenge would be to fully understand the different aspects of the role.
He said: "There's certain information as a candidate you're not privy to, so it will be a huge learning curve to fully understand what needs to be done.
"With regard to funding, I've already had meetings with the Home Office and the Prime Minister to make sure I get a fair formula for Lincolnshire."
Ms Ayling polled 37,420 in the second round of voting.
Turnout in the election was higher than that of 2012 when Alan Hardwick was voted in with the figure at 21.19%, compared to 15% four years ago.
Candidates are listed alphabetically by surname. BBC News App users: tap here to see the candidates.
More information is available on the Choose my PCC website. | Conservative Marc Jones has been elected as Lincolnshire's next police and crime commissioner. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | The bodies of Chris Morrison, 27, from Harris, and Martin Johnstone, 29, from Caithness, were found following Saturday's incident off Mingulay.
Skipper Paul Alliston, 42, from Lewis, remains missing. Another of the crew survived after swimming to shore.
Owners Duncan and Murdo Kennedy described the sinking as "tragic".
The boat sank while at anchor in the early hours of Saturday.
After reaching shore, Lachlan Armstrong, 27, clung to rocks until he was rescued by a lifeboat. He has told of problems inflating the Louisa's life raft.
Fresh searches for Mr Alliston are expected to be made later this week, while the Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) has begun an investigation of the sinking.
In a statement, the Kennedys said: "We are totally devastated at the loss of Paul, Chris and Martin due to the tragic sinking off Mingulay last Saturday.
"Our thoughts, sympathy and prayers are with Paul's mother Wilma and family in Stornoway, Chris's partner Naomi and his children Jessica and Hazel, also his parents in Leverburgh, Martin's parents and family in Thurso and with Lachlann and his family, as he reflects over the tragic loss of his close friends in the sinking."
The owners thanked Barra lifeboat volunteers, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency and the emergency services for their actions.
They added: "We are engaging fully with representatives from MAIB, officers from Police Scotland and the vessel's insurers, as they continue their comprehensive investigation into events which occurred into and following the sinking of the Louisa." | The owners of the crab boat Louisa said they have been "devastated" by the loss of three crew after the vessel sank off the Western Isles. |
Summarize the provided section. | Bee, a labradoodle, tumbled about 20ft (6m) down the cliff at Perranporth before becoming stranded on a loose ledge at about 20:00 BST on Wednesday.
A member of St Agnes Coastguard Search and Rescue team was lowered down to the dog before they abseiled about 80ft (24m) to the beach.
Owner Rachel Budzinska said it had been "very traumatic". Bee was unhurt.
Ms Budzinska said she "couldn't thank them enough" and would be "forever indebted" to the team.
Robert Farr, who saved the dog, said she had been "clinging on and yelping" and he had to "coax" her into a rescue bag so they could safely abseil down to the beach. | A dog has been rescued after falling down a steep cliff on the north Cornwall coast. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | It was revealed on Wednesday that ministers had invited grammar school leaders to apply for £150m over three years for new selective school places.
School leaders have also demanded the return of £384m, initially promised to turn schools into academies.
The Department for Education says school funding is at record levels.
School leaders have been angered that while they have been warning about a lack of basic funding, the government has been able to promise hundreds of millions for projects such as expanding grammars and changing schools to academy status.
Head teachers in West Sussex have been campaigning against what they claim are serious budget shortfalls.
They have written to local MPs to express their "incredulity" at the funding that appears to be available for grammars.
They are also calling on political leaders to account for their spending decisions.
The Grammar School Heads' Association had a private meeting with the education secretary and schools minister in which they discussed plans to expand selective places and to create new grammar schools for 2020.
The notes of the meeting, published by the grammar heads, include details of how to contact the department for £50m per year for new selective places.
The heads in West Sussex have called for emergency funding of £20m and have warned that without this schools might have to cut hours, increase class sizes or stop teaching some subjects.
They have told MPs that "throughout our campaign school leaders have sought to be 'relentlessly reasonable'; now we are simply furious".
They describe local schools as "scrabbling around for any form of cash like a desperate person checking down the side of their sofa for the odd pound coin or two".
Earlier this week, finance directors and school business managers from Barnet wrote to the Department for Education warning of an impending financial crisis.
They called on the government to return the £384m promised to fund a plan to turn all of England's schools into academies.
When that was overturned by a backbench rebellion, it was revealed that the funding was taken back by the Treasury.
School leaders have argued that a redistribution of how schools are funded, in a new funding formula, could avoid having any losers if this money, once announced for schools, could be returned.
Grammar school head teachers have also been complaining about funding shortages - and have warned that they might have to start asking parents for payments.
The National Union of Teachers has attacked the government for pledging funds for new grammar places when schools are already "crying out for sufficient funding".
The union's general secretary Kevin Courtney accused the education secretary of "fiddling around with secret plans for a return to a two-tier education system" which would be of no benefit to 90% of children.
A Department for Education spokeswoman said schools in West Sussex would gain from changes in the funding formula - with an extra £145 per pupil per year.
"We have protected the core schools budget in real terms since 2010, with school funding at its highest level on record at more than £40bn in 2016-17," said the DFE spokeswoman. | Head teachers warning that they face financial meltdown are "furious" that the government has been pledging funds to create grammar schools in England. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | His climbing partner, Jamie Fisher died of hypothermia. My brother, now 45, survived but had to have all four limbs amputated to save his body from septic shock.
Since then my "limbless mountaineer" sibling has been attempting to push back the boundaries of what people with disabilities can achieve.
His latest venture has been to encourage other people with disabilities to try rock climbing.
He was one of the organisers behind Scotland's first paraclimb competition, held at the Edinburgh International Climbing Arena near Ratho on Sunday. I went along to see what he was up to.
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When you walk into the world's largest indoor climbing arena, you can't fail to be impressed. Built into an old rock quarry, it boasts thousands of square metres of wall with routes of up to 28m high.
At first glance I can see that the walls are busy with people carefully, methodically and gracefully scaling the walls.
Then I notice some of the climbers have a prosthetic leg or a missing arm. On the ground are a couple of discarded wheelchairs, and a guide dog left to watch.
As we walk around my brother causally reels off introductions: Keith, an amputee base jumper; Alan, who lost a leg in motorbike accident; Cody, a US war veteran...
Jamie adds quickly: "But I don't want to imply rock climbing is just for people into extreme thrills."
As if to illustrate his point, I turn round and see a boy who looks about three or four, climbing on a wall behind me.
There is something very natural about climbing. It presents a physical challenge, as well as an exercise in problem solving.
It's an individual sport which can be done at any level, yet it also involves selfless team work between climbing partners.
There's not much difference between able-bodied climbing and paraclimbing.
Many paraclimbers can simply compensate for their disabilities through ingenuity and gutsy determination.
But there are also adaptive devices available, such as special harnesses and pulley systems, and prosthetic climbing feet for leg amputees.
"Paraclimbing is entirely inclusive," explains Jamie. "We don't care if your disability is a physical one, or whether it's a mental disability.
"I believe everyone should have the chance to try climbing and see if it's something they enjoy, and even to be able compete at the highest level.
"Two weeks ago I wasn't sure if anyone would show up, but there are about 30 people taking part in the competition another 30 or so have turned up for the 'come and try' session."
Ryan MacDonald, 33, a successful wheelchair tennis player, is one of those trying climbing for the first time.
After trying out the pulley system, he says he'll definitely be coming back with his kids.
"It's so refreshing to see that the guys here are so open," he says. "Even if someone comes along with a disability that doesn't seem to be catered for, they'll make sure it happens for them.
"A lot of times those people would have been left as spectators.
"With disability sport, it's sometimes just seen as a separate disability club, but this is something you can come and take part with your friends and family, which I think is absolutely massive for people."
I watch Kat Langton stand up from her wheelchair and walk tentatively over to climb a wall, leaning on both her boyfriend and coach.
The 22 year old has cerebral palsy, which affects her muscle control and movement.
"For me climbing is basically freedom," she tells me later. "I get on the wall and it's like I'm free, just like everyone else.
"Someone actually once said to me that I don't look any different from anyone else when I'm on the wall, and that is the essence of climbing for me."
She's right - on the wall her limb movement looks incredibly strong and controlled.
Cody Elliott has such a "big fire" in his heart for paraclimbing that he's travelled from California especially for the event.
Three years ago the 24-year-old was blown up by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) in Afghanistan.
The US veteran suffered facial injuries and his left leg was amputated above the knee.
He says: "I've seen the worst it can get for people in terms of pain medication and not wanting to live life again.
"Just last year in 2013 I was in an bad place, but since I found rock climbing it's saved my life.
"I truthfully believe in my mind it can save other people's lives.
"If I could come all the way from the States and influence a couple of lives here, hopefully they can take that into their own community."
Cody's spirit of comradeship and support is evident in all the competitors.
Even though these climbers are taking part in a competition, they shout up encouragement and offer suggestions on how to master tricky moves. Everyone cheers when someone reaches the top of a climb.
The biggest cheer of the day goes to Ethan Brown who is trying climbing for the first time.
The six-year-old from Musselburgh has brittle bone disease, which has prevented his bones from growing properly and means he has to use a wheelchair.
The slightest of knocks can cause his bones to fracture. Understandably his parents find watching him scale the wall a nail-biting experience.
The arena holds its breath as Ethan towers higher and higher above his wheelchair, laughing, kicking and shouting: "higher" each time he edges further into the sky.
Watching the pure joy on Ethan's face proves to me that everyone should indeed have the opportunity to try rock climbing.
A day earlier, Jamie and the other event organisers held a paraclimb training day for climbing wall instructors from throughout Scotland.
"Things don't end here today," he says. "We want anyone with a disability to be able to go to their local climbing wall and have their needs catered for.
"We want to ensure paraclimbing continues to grow as a sport in Scotland."
For more information about paraclimbing in Scotland contact MCofS Sport Development Officer [email protected].
If you want to find out about rock climbing in general, you can also look at our Get Inspired dedicated page on the sport. | Fifteen years ago my brother, Jamie Andrew, lost both his hands and feet to severe frostbite after getting caught in a five-day storm in the alps. |
Summarize the following piece. | The Indomitable Lions fought back to beat Egypt 2-1 in the final and win the title for the first time in 15 years.
"I don't have 23 players, I have 23 friends," Broos told BBC Sport.
"Over the weeks we went from being a squad to becoming a family. It's unbelievable what all the guys did. It is tremendous."
Mohamed Elneny put Egypt ahead in the final on Sunday but two Cameroon substitutes turned the game around - Nicolas Nkoulou equalised and Vincent Aboubakar struck the winner.
"This was the reason we won the cup, because of the spirit in our camp," Broos added. "The guys who were on the bench were happy - and the players who came off the bench decided the game."
Cameroon's success was achieved despite seven players refusing the call-up to play at the tournament, with the likes of Liverpool centre-back Joel Matip and West Brom full-back Allan Nyom opting to stay with their clubs.
It was suggested by defender Ambroise Oyongo that it served to strengthen the ties between the players who did go to Gabon.
But before the tournament, expectations that Cameroon could win a fifth Nations Cup title were low.
"Our ambition was to finish in the top two in our group, get to the knockout round and see what happened from there," Broos said.
"Then we said to ourselves, 'ok let's see what we can do in the quarter-finals'."
After Cameroon won a penalty shootout to eliminate heavy favourites Senegal in their last-eight match, Broos and his men started to believe they could go all the way.
"We got a real boost of confidence when we beat Senegal," Broos admitted.
"Our confidence showed against Egypt. We were dominated at first but in the second half what my team did, to come back from 1-0 down, it was tremendous." | Cameroon coach Hugo Broos revealed he felt his squad were "becoming a family" as they progressed on route to winning the Africa Cup of Nations in Gabon. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | The attack happened in Sanban, about 100km (60 miles) south-east of the capital, Sanaa, witnesses said.
It was not clear who was behind the attack but a Saudi-led coalition has been carrying out air raids against Houthi rebels.
Last month an air strike on a wedding party near the Red Sea port of Mocha killed at least 130 people.
The coalition denied it was responsible for that attack.
The latest incident was said to have struck a wedding party being hosted by a tribal leader who is known to support the Houthi rebels. At least 25 people were reported to have been wounded.
About 5,000 people, including 2,355 civilians, have been killed in air strikes and fighting on the ground since 26 March, when Houthi fighters and allied army units forced Yemen's internationally recognised president to flee the country.
An estimated 21 million people - or 80% of the population - require some form of humanitarian assistance and almost 1.5 million people are internally displaced.
The Houthis - northern Shia Muslim rebels - backed by forces loyal to Yemen's previous President Ali Abdullah Saleh, forced the government into exile in March.
Yemen's UN-recognised President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi returned to the southern port city of Aden last month, where his government has set up a temporary base.
His forces, backed by the Saudi-led coalition, are pressing north towards rebel-held Sanaa. | At least 13 people are reported to have been killed in air strikes that hit a wedding in a rebel-held town in Yemen. |
Summarize the following piece. | The 19-year-old is set to make just his third start in their final Champions Cup pool game at Clermont Auvergne.
"You get a sense of it in training, but there's nothing like matchday intensity," he told BBC Sport.
"Especially in Europe you see that increase in intensity that as a nine the breakdowns are a lot quicker, there are a lot more bodies in there.
He continued: "You learn during the games and you've got to pick up things during the game."
Maunder's chance comes as Exeter rest their only experienced scrum-half Dave Lewis, with Will Chudley and Niko Matawalu out injured.
"There are going to be these opportunities for the younger boys and it is vital that you taken them and you impresses the coaches with attributes that they like to see," Maunder added.
"Hopefully that can lead to more opportunities in the future." | Exeter's teenage scrum-half Jack Maunder says he is adapting well to the pace of top-flight rugby. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Hart, 29, was criticised for shouting and swearing in the tunnel before tournament games in France.
The Manchester City player made mistakes against Wales and Iceland before England went out in the last 16.
"The Euros wasn't my finest hour, so I needed to have a think and pick apart how I played and what I did," he said.
Hart was at fault against Wales when he let Gareth Bale's free-kick to squirm under him in the 2-1 win.
More crucially, he failed to stop Kolbeinn Sigthorsson's winner in the embarrassing last-16 defeat by minnows Iceland.
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Hart lost his place in the Manchester City team under new manager Pep Guardiola and has since been loaned to Italian side Torino.
He remains the number one choice for his national side and made a series of stunning saves in last month's World Cup qualifying draw in Slovenia.
"I've got a lot of energy, a lot of passion," said Hart. "It could have been too much.
"There's nothing wrong with being positive. Being passionate and proud of your country is definitely a positive - but there's different ways of channelling it. I've looked into that and hopefully it will help.
"I'm constantly changing and evolving, trying to be the best I can be. Learning from things that didn't go too well is definitely a way of doing that."
Richard Beech, 33, was convicted of the physical abuse over a six-year period, but cleared of four rape charges.
Beech, of Dundee, will be monitored in the community for two years following his release from prison.
The trial heard the offences were committed in Dundee and Forfar.
Beech attacked one of his victims to the danger of her life by putting a pillow over her face and his hands round her throat at a house in Forfar.
The woman told the trial: "I actually thought he was going to kill me."
She told the High Court in Glasgow she eventually managed to push him off "with force", but was "really petrified" following the attack.
Another woman, who met Beech through a dating website, told the trial he seemed "like a nice guy" at first, but that he later got "really angry" and told her he knew how to build bombs.
Beech, who has previously been convicted of going Awol from the army, was found guilty of nine charges against six women committed between 2007 and 2013.
Defence QC Edward Targowski told the court that Beech continues to deny the offences.
Jailing Beech, judge Lady Scott told him: "You subjected one of your partners to regular violence, slapping her and pouring hot liquid over her and head-butting her, often accompanied by threats.
"You compressed the throats of three of your victims.
"One said this happened a number of times and she said she thought she was going to die.
"This was a sustained and serious course of conduct of significant violence against female partners." | England keeper Joe Hart is trying to "channel" his pre-match energy and says he could have been over-hyped during the team's Euro 2016 humiliation.
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A former soldier has been jailed for four years for a campaign of "significant violence" against six ex-partners in Tayside. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The incident happened at the Auchenharvie filling station in Boglemart Street at about 07:45 on Saturday.
The man is expected to appear at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court. | A 37-year-old man has been arrested over a robbery at a petrol station in Stevenston. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | The Ryder Cup veteran, 41, was set to lose his playing rights after he failed to earn the required points or prize money in the 10 events covered by his medical exemption after a foot injury.
However, the PGA Tour have decided that their rules "unintentionally made it more difficult" for injured players.
"It's a relief I can plan my schedule for the rest of 2017," Poulter said.
"Obviously I've got work to do but I'm in a very different situation today than I was yesterday."
Poulter is playing in this week's revamped New Orleans Classic team event as the invited partner of Geoff Ogilvy, who qualified for the tournament.
The duo are nine shots back after the opening three rounds, but should they win on Sunday, both will receive a two-year Tour exemption.
World number 195 Poulter had previously said he thought his struggles had been "slightly over-dramatised".
But the 2008 Open runner-up admitted that "being in kind of no-man's-land, not knowing whether you're going to play golf, is very tough".
Brian Gay of the United States is the other player to have benefited from the change.
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From August, 15-17 year-olds in young offenders institutions in England will have to be in their cells with the lights out by 22:30.
Mr Grayling said enforcing the blanket policy across all five YOIs would give teenagers more structure.
Critics say the government should be focusing on more important prison reform issues.
Mr Grayling said it was "crucial that young people, most of whom have had chaotic and troubled lives, finally get the discipline so badly needed to help turn their lives around".
"In some prisons young people are allowed to go to bed when they please," he claimed.
"I don't think that is right. Stopping this inconsistency and introducing a strict lights-out policy is all part of our approach to addressing youth offending. Those who fail to comply will face tough sanctions."
The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said the plans would stop the teenagers from "staying up all night watching TV".
Offenders who did not observe the new bedtimes would be penalised and lose privileges like access to a television, it said.
Juliet Lyon, director of the Prison Reform Trust, criticised the move, claiming it would exacerbate physical restraint problems.
She said the prison system was already struggling with a host of more pressing problems - among them overcrowding, budget cuts and "dangerously low staffing".
"As most parents of teenagers know, common-sense discussion, constructive activity, setting reasonable boundaries and encouraging personal responsibility all work better than new hard and fast rules backed by petty restrictions and harsh punishments."
Frances Crook, chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, warned the move could be a "death sentence" for offenders.
She told BBC Breakfast that self-injury rates in young offenders institutions were an "epidemic" that needed to be dealt with and called for a greater emphasis to be placed on improving physical activities and education for offenders.
"I think politicians seem to live in a fantasy world where they think prisons seem to be something like a public schools - well they are not, they are the opposite," she said.
The new bedtime rule is part of an overall reform of young offenders institutions in England, which will see the number of hours offenders spend in education doubled to 24 every week.
BBC News home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw said the move was part of Mr Grayling's plan to "bring more order" to the centres.
"There is an issue about whether it can be enforced because there is, I'm told, no central switch in these young offenders institutions that can actually turn out the lights at 22:30 and it will depend on the young person in the cell to do it themselves. Obviously that could create difficulties for prison officers," he said.
Earlier this month Mr Grayling unveiled detailed plans for the first "secure college", to open in Leicestershire in 2017.
The £85m facility will house up to 320 offenders aged 12 to 17.
It is meant to be a move away from the "traditional environment of bars on windows" and focus instead on education.
As of April this year, there were 827 young people serving custodial sentences in England's five young offenders institutions, according to the MoJ. | England's Ian Poulter will retain his PGA Tour card for the rest of this season after a change to the rules.
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All young offenders will face strict bedtimes for the first time, Justice Secretary Chris Grayling has announced. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The staff quit amid reports that party members were asked questions about issues related to Mr Farron's faith.
Mr Lamb told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme he was upset by their "unacceptable" behaviour.
Mr Farron urged the party to move on and said it was not incompatible for a "Christian to lead a liberal party".
The issue was raised as the two men faced questions from the public on the BBC show.
Mr Lamb, the MP for North Norfolk and former care minister, is running against Tim Farron, former party president, for the Lib Dem leadership following the resignation of Nick Clegg after the party's election drubbing.
The row emerged at the weekend after the party said it was looking into allegations that private polling conducted by Mr Lamb's team may have breached data protection rules and was considering referring the matter to the information commissioner.
The two aides resigned after party members claim they were called by someone they believed to be from Lib Dem HQ rather than Mr Lamb's personal team and reportedly asked questions about the candidates' stances on issues such as abortion and gay marriage.
Appearing on the Victoria Derbyshire show, Mr Lamb said he did not condone the actions of the two aides and said they would play no further part in the campaign.
"They should not have done it and as soon as I saw Tim I apologised to him," he said. "I don't want the campaign to be fought in this way - this campaign has to be about ideas and our competing merits".
Mr Farron said he accepted his colleague's apology and said "let's just move on".
Pressed on his views on abortion, Mr Farron said that he supported a woman's right to terminate a pregnancy in line with the current law but suggested that every time this happened, it was a "tragedy".
"I am not saying it should be illegal. I am saying it is always a tragedy... when anyone is in a situation where they feel they need one."
He added: "The point that is being made here and what tends to be landed by those folks who Norman has now expelled from his team was 'is it compatible for anybody to lead a Liberal Party and be a Christian".
But Mr Lamb, who previously told the studio audience he was an agnostic and "did not have any faith", intervened to say this "was not the point". He added: "It is about the particular issue about abortion."
Mr Farron used the example of Charles Kennedy's personal faith to suggest it was possible to lead the Lib Dems as a committed Christian.
Both men defended the party's decision to go into coalition with the Conservatives and also refused to rule out entering another coalition despite the party's disastrous election result.
Tim Farron said he would seek a "guarantee" of electoral reform before joining a coalition. He said "history would be kind to Nick Clegg" and he did not agree with those who believed being in power was "grubby".
"If you want to change the world, then you have to come first."
The party needed "to re-establish its integrity in a big way", he said, by focusing on issues that differentiated them from their opponents such as support for immigration, public housing and action to tackle climate change.
However, he said it was "not inevitable" that the party would survive.
Mr Lamb said the party had made "stupid mistakes" in office, such as over tuition fees, and had acted as "novices" in comparison to their "ruthless" Conservatives counterparts and had made "stupid mistakes", such as pledging to oppose any rise in tuition fees.
"Once you lose the trust of people, they will stop listening to you," he said.
But he said he was proud that they had put the country first by agreeing to "get their hands dirty" and was proud of the contribution that the party had made in areas such as education and mental health. | Norman Lamb has said he has apologised to Lib Dem leadership rival Tim Farron over the conduct of two of his aides in a row over private polling. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Lutfur Rahman was ordered to step down as mayor of Tower Hamlets and a poll was declared void after he was found guilty of electoral fraud.
Four voters alleged he used "corrupt and illegal practices" in last year's election, which must now be re-run.
Andy Erlam, who led the group against Mr Raham, said he would stand for mayor in a new election on June 11.
"Many people have asked me to stand," said Mr Erlam.
"It's the chance in our lifetimes to change everything for the better."
Mr Erlam, who has also stood for election to Tower Hamlets Council on an anti-corruption ticket, said he would be backed in his fight to be mayor by an "anti-corruption" party called Red Flag.
Labour has selected John Biggs, its defeated candidate in last year's Tower Hamlets mayoral election, to fight the re-run contest for them.
Mr Rahman was found "personally" guilty of wrongdoing and "guilty by his agents" by Election Commissioner Richard Mawrey, who sat as a judge at an Election Court trial.
Mr Erlam has described the ruling as "fantastic for democracy", but said more inquiries were needed and has urged police to investigate, calling on prosecutors to consider bringing criminal charges.
Mr Rahman said there was "little, if any" evidence of wrongdoing against him.
His lawyers described the group of four's claims as invention, exaggeration and "in some cases downright deliberately false allegations".
Mr Rahman was not in court to hear Mr Mawrey's verdict.
But he said the judgment had come as a "shock", and is taking further legal advice. | A writer and film-maker who led a successful legal fight to oust an east London mayor is to run for office. |
Can you summarize this content? | Isabelle Dinoire died in April aged 49 of cancers that spread all the more quickly because of treatment to prevent her body rejecting her new face.
She had the transplant after being left disfigured by her pet labrador, which gnawed off her nose and lips while trying to revive her after a suicide attempt.
Nadey Hakim, who helped treat Ms Dinoire, says she would have been aware of the risk.
"It's a known fact that whoever is transplanted is more likely to be prone to cancer, not in the organ that has been transplanted but any cancer," said Mr Hakim, now professor of transplant surgery at Imperial College London.
"If you are on immunosuppressants, you are not going to fight cancer the same way. It will spread and multiply much quicker than if you have the policeman around to stop it."
About 40 face transplants have been carried out since Ms Dinoire's pioneering procedure.
Some, such as the world's most extensive face transplant carried out on a volunteer firefighter in the US, appear to have been a stunning success.
Patrick Hardison, whose surgery was the first to include scalp and functioning eyelids, said in August that he felt like a "normal guy" for the first time in 15 years.
He had 71 reconstructive surgeries before the transplant after a burning building fell on him in 2001.
"Before the transplant, every day I had to wake up and get myself motivated to face the world," Mr Hardison said.
"Now I don't worry about people pointing and staring or kids running away crying. I'm happy."
For Ms Dinoire, the pointing and staring came after the transplant.
"It was excruciating. I live in a small town and so everyone knew my story. It wasn't easy at the beginning.
"Children would laugh at me and everyone would say, 'Look it's her, it's her'," she told the BBC in 2012.
A new face can, however, be easier to accept than a different body part, Prof Hakim says.
He eventually severed the donor hand he himself had transplanted in a world-first onto New Zealander Clint Hallam in 1998 after Mr Hallam stopped taking immunosuppressants because he could not afford them.
"Living with a transplant is not easy. You have the arm of someone else, it's a dead person's hand you are carrying. At one point he himself started hating it," Prof Hakim said.
Without the immunosuppressants, his body began rejecting the new hand.
"The hand started disintegrating, it went red and then white, it looked horrible," said Prof Hakim.
"It can only be better with the face. People have such deformities, bad enough to wear a mask or not go out at all."
In some cases however, a transplant may not be the best option, says Dr James Partridge from the organisation Changing Faces.
He founded the organisation in 1992 after suffering severe burns in a car fire aged 18. It campaigns for equal treatment for people who, for reasons such as injury, illness, paralysis or congenital condition, have unusual faces.
Dr Partridge says the quality of information about the medical treatment on offer is "absolutely crucial".
Those like the "very courageous" Ms Dinoire, who was advised that a transplant was the only option, have not only a higher cancer risk but also the possibility their hopes for the procedure might not be met, he says.
"We can't deny that surgery has aesthetic limits and most people who contact us are in the position of having to accept that, like it or not, there's a limit to how much aesthetic change they can get," he said.
"That was my case - what I call the diminishing returns of surgery - which meant I had to psychosocially adjust to what I was going through. And this has not been given anything like as much attention as it should be."
The interventions Changing Faces has created are now being incorporated by some surgeons into patient care programmes, he says.
They include learning new social skills to manage other people's reactions and developing a positive attitude.
"Surgery has limits - you need the psychosocial to back it up. Dammit you are going to feel sad and lonely," said Dr Partridge.
Both Ms Dinoire and Mr Hardison pondered their identity after their respective face transplants.
For Ms Dinoire there was a sense of loss, but also of companionship.
"When I look in the mirror, I see a mixture of the two [of us]. The donor is always with me," she said in 2012.
Mr Hardison struck an upbeat note.
"I'd like to say that I'm the same old Pat, but that would not give enough credit to the amazing journey I have gone through this past year," he said last month.
"The road to recovery has been long and hard, but if I had to do it again, I'd do it in a heartbeat." | She underwent the world's first face transplant in 2005 and later said her donor had "saved her life" - but the transplant may also have shortened it. |
Can you summarize this content? | The 28-year-old from Newbury had been detained on Tuesday on suspicion of causing or allowing the death of five-month-old Jack McLaren.
Jack's father Daniel McLaren, 29, of Fleetwood Close in Newbury, is charged with his murder and appeared earlier at Reading Crown Court via video link.
He has been remanded in custody until the next hearing on 4 August.
Mr McLaren has also been charged with causing grievous bodily harm with intent to another child aged under one.
Thames Valley Police said it is continuing with its inquiries. | Police are taking no action against a woman who was arrested in connection with the murder of a baby boy. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | Barrieu was assistant coach at Le Havre, the club Bradley left to join the Swans on 3 October.
The 44-year-old had previously worked with the USA national team, LA Galaxy and Sheffield Wednesday.
At the time of his appointment, Bradley said he wanted to add one or two coaches and hinted at bringing in someone with Premier League experience.
Three members of the backroom staff - Diego Bortoluzzi, Gabrielle Ambrosetti, Claudio Bordon - left when Guidolin was dismissed.
First team coach Alan Curtis, who has been associated with the club as a player, coach and caretaker manager since the 1970s, is expected to stay on.
"For me Alan Curtis will be very important, he's going to be my older brother - only a little older," said Bradley.
"His sense of the club, his eye, his experience will be important. I'm working on getting the right balance."
Bradley is the first American to manage in the Premier League and takes charge of his first match when Swansea play Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday, 15 October.
It has taken taxonomic experts eight years to pull together all existing databases and compile one super-definitive list, known as the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS).
Of the 419,000 species names recorded in the scientific literature, nearly half (190,400) have been shown to be duplicate entries.
One species of sea snail even had 113 different names.
The WoRMS editors have now put the number of species known to science at 228,450.
The vast majority - 86% or about 195,000 species - are animals.
These include just over 18,000 species of fish described since the mid-1700s, more than 1,800 sea stars, 816 squids, 93 whales and dolphins and 8,900 clams and other bivalves.
The remainder of the register is made up of kelp, seaweeds and other plants, bacteria, viruses, fungi and single-cell organisms.
Although the definitive list has shrunk in the process of compiling WoRMS, the catalogue continues to grow rapidly.
In 2014, 1,451 new-to-science marine creatures were added to the register. It is estimated another 10,000 or more new species are held in laboratories around the world just waiting to be described.
Dr Jan Mees is from the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ) in Belgium, and a co-chair of WoRMS.
He told BBC News: "The purpose of WoRMS was to create a master list of all organisms that have ever been observed and described in the world oceans.
"This task is now near completion. All the historical data have been entered in the database; all the names that have become redundant over time have also been identified and documented.
“And now we have a system in place that can be used as a backbone for data management activities and for marine biodiversity research; and that can be updated by a consortium of taxonomists."
Asked to name his favourite species in the list, Dr Mees pointed to the “stargazing” shrimp (Mysidopsis zsilaveczi) in South Africa. It is so called because its eyes appear to be fixed in an upward-looking direction.
“The pigment pattern of the eyes gives the impression that animal is constantly gazing skywards. It’s not; it’s just an effect. But it’s beautiful.
"But then I would say that, because as well as being a member of the scientific steering committee for WoRMS, I’m also the taxonomic editor for the mysid shrimps.”
[email protected] and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos | Swansea manager Bob Bradley is appointing Pierre Barrieu to his backroom staff the Liberty Stadium.
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A mammoth effort to catalogue all known ocean life is nearly complete. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Drivers of "public carriage vehicles", which seat 9-16 people, are not subject to a criminal check - unlike hackney carriage and private taxi drivers.
This allowed "unscrupulous drivers" to work even if councils have banned them, the Local Government Association said.
A Department for Transport spokesman said it was planning immediate action.
Under the current rules, drivers of public carriage vehicles are licensed by the DVLA, whereas councils license taxi drivers.
Taxi drivers require an up-to-date enhanced criminal record check to be issued with a licence.
The LGA said a loophole meant drivers who have been refused a taxi or minicab licence - or whose licence has been revoked by councils - could instead obtain a minibus licence and continue to operate in the same area.
Some had continued working with the same company, the LGA added.
It urged the government to change the law to ensure vehicles seating nine to 16 people were instead licensed by councils.
Simon Blackburn, from the LGA, said the majority of minibus drivers were "people who the public can trust".
However, he added: "This loophole provides an opportunity for unscrupulous drivers to continue to work in close proximity to passengers, even when a council has determined that they are not safe to do so.
"Larger minibuses are often sent in place of a regular taxi to pick up individuals or small parties, purely because they are nearest to the pick-up point rather than because there is a requirement for such a large vehicle.
"They are used to take groups of children to school, or to drive groups home after nights out.
"It is therefore extremely worrying that councils' proactive work to protect taxi passengers from harm - and particularly those who may be most vulnerable - is being undermined by this loophole."
A Department for Transport spokesman said public safety remained "our first priority".
It said: "It is the responsibility of councils to meet their legal requirements to ensure all drivers are 'fit and proper' persons before issuing a taxi or private hire driver's licence.
"We are taking immediate action to provide the same level of protection for passengers in minibuses as they receive in taxis." | A legal loophole that allows minibus drivers to operate without undergoing a criminal record check is putting passengers in danger, councils say. |
Summarize the following piece. | The 22-year-old was recently released by Hull, having signed a three-year deal with the Tigers back in 2014.
He previously scored 26 goals in the 2013-14 season for non-league side Folkestone Invicta.
Ter Horst, recovering from a shoulder operation, told Maidstone's website: "This is a club definitely on the way up and I hope I can be a part of that."
From midnight it became illegal to keep a weapon without a permit.
The Scottish government has estimated there could be up to 500,000 air weapons in Scotland, but only 100,000 have been accounted for so far.
The new legislation, passed last year, came in the wake of the killing of two-year-old Andrew Morton who was shot in the head with an airgun pellet.
The Air Weapons and Licensing (Scotland) Act 2015 makes it a criminal offence to have an air weapon without a licence or permit and could see perpetrators fined or face up to two years in prison.
Thousands of weapons have already been handed in and destroyed and backers of the new law have said they believe it will curb gun crime.
About 7,000 applications for licences, received by the end of October, were being processed and were due to be completed the 31st December deadline.
However, a further 3,500 owners who sought a permit in the past two months will have their applications determined in 2017.
They have been warned they must make arrangements to have their weapons stored with another firearms certificate holder - or they will be committing an offence.
Air weapons were used in almost half of all offences involving a gun in the past year.
Justice Secretary Michael Matheson said: "Every day the police, the public and animal welfare groups have to face the results of air weapon misuse, from anti-social behaviour to horrific and deliberate injuries to wildlife, pets and very occasionally people.
"By licensing air weapons we will take them out of the hands of those who would misuse them and better protect our communities.
"The new law coming into force is part of our long-standing commitment to eradicate gun crime in Scotland. We are not banning air weapons outright, but ensuring their use is properly regulated and users have a legitimate reason for them.
"We believe the new licence strikes the right balance between protecting communities and allowing legitimate use in a safe environment to continue."
Colin Shedden, the Scottish Director for the British Association for Shooting and Conservation, warned owners who do not have a licence to take action immediately.
"The advice that we are giving to people is that if you want to avoid breaking the law, and you don't have your air weapon certificate granted then what you need to do is find a friend who has an air weapon certificate, shotgun certificate, or firearm certificate and they can store it for you.
"You can also take it to a registered firearms dealer and ask them to store it for you, but time is running out."
Critics of the new law have said it will not reduce gun crime.
David Traill, owner of the Grahams of Inverness tackle and gun shop, said: "The laws to prevent the misuse of air rifles, or any firearm, or any weapon at all, are long established. The police already have those powers.
"This legislation is a piece of tokenism which really will achieve nothing.
"The people who will misuse air weapons are not the kind of people who are going to go to the trouble of licensing those weapons anyway."
The additional two days' paid leave will be used by officers to engage in sport or community activities.
Other initiatives introduced by newly-appointed Chief Constable Bill Skelly, include a temporary tennis court at the force's headquarters.
Mr Skelly said it was "an investment" in the workforce to try and improve the physical and mental health of officers.
More on this and other Lincolnshire stories
The chief constable said Lincolnshire officers were averaging six days a year in sick leave, costing the force about £1m per year.
Mr Skelly said the idea was to help staff deal with "the stress and anxiety of an increased workloads and reduced [police] numbers".
"This isn't about distracting or diverting from their core duties that the public pay for," he said.
"The whole thrust of the wellbeing agenda is that if people are happier, people are feeling well about themselves and they are healthier and more active, then the job that they are employed to do, to help reduce harm in our communities to protect our public they will be able to do that better." | National League club Maidstone United have signed former Hull City striker Johan ter Horst on a free transfer.
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Owners of air weapons are now required to have a licence following a tightening of firearms legislation.
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Police officers are to have extra days off as part of a "wellbeing" plan by Lincolnshire Police. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | And in an unexpected twist, he wants the White House press corps to decide where it should go.
Before taking office, Mr Trump told CBS's 60 Minutes that he would not claim his presidential salary.
It was confirmed that it would be donated after multiple media outlets asked if he was keeping that pledge.
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told a press briefing: "The President's intention right now is to donate his salary at the end of the year, and he has kindly asked that you all determine where that goes."
Mr Spicer joked that letting the media choose a beneficiary would be "a way to avoid scrutiny".
"In all seriousness, I think his view is he made a pledge to the American people he wants to donate it to charity and he'd love your help to determine where it should go," Mr Spicer told the press.
The president's salary has been fixed at $400,000 a year since 2001. Mr Trump had previously said he would take only $1 a year, because the president is required by law to receive a salary.
It is unclear which organisation the press corps will choose to support.
Suggestions have included setting up a fund for journalism scholarships via the White House Correspondents' Association.
Mr Trump is not the first US leader to forego a salary. Herbert Hoover, who made his fortune in mining before taking office, and John F Kennedy, who inherited his wealth, both donated their pay to charity.
"We ask that you continue to keep her in your thoughts and prayers," said the 81-year-old's daughter Melissa.
Rivers was taken ill on Thursday at an outpatient centre in the Yorkville neighbourhood of Manhattan.
The comic is understood to have stopped breathing during surgery and was rushed to Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.
According to unconfirmed reports, the performer's heart had stopped beating during the procedure.
Before being admitted to hospital, Rivers had been due to appear on Friday at a theatre in Red Bank, New Jersey.
The veteran performer and outspoken fashion critic has won both fans and detractors with her acerbic remarks and waspish sideswipes at the rich and famous.
News of her condition prompted a deluge of get well wishes from members of that community, among them Star Trek actor Zachary Quinto and singer Courtney Love.
"I want to thank everyone for the overwhelming love and support for my mother," said Melissa Rivers in a statement.
One was killed at the base and two others died later in hospital.
They were in vehicles approaching the gate of a military training centre at al-Jafr air base when they came under small-arms fire, the official added.
An earlier statement from the Jordanian military said the car they were in failed to stop at the gate and was fired upon by security forces.
"A total of three US service members died today in the incident in Jordan," the official said.
"Initial reports were that one was killed, two injured. The two injured service members were transported to a hospital in Amman, where they died."
The Pentagon and the White House said they would work with Jordan to determine exactly what had happened.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the US personnel were part of an "ongoing" training mission.
"The United States is interested in getting to the bottom of what occurred," he said.
AFP news agency quoted a US defence official as saying it was a "green on blue" incident, a military term for when friendly forces attack US personnel.
"But we can't say for the moment if it was a deliberate" act to kill US personnel or "some kind of misunderstanding," the official told the news agency.
The incident happened around midday local time (10:00 GMT).
Jordan is a close ally of the US and a member of the US-led coalition fighting the so-called Islamic State (IS) group in Syria and Iraq.
US forces have trained a small group of Syrian rebels in Jordan as well as Iraqi and Palestinian security forces.
Last November, a Jordanian police captain opened fire at a police training centre near the capital Amman, killing two Americans, a South African and two Jordanians.
The Jordanian government subsequently said the police captain had been a troubled individual but security sources said he was an IS supporter. | US President Donald Trump will donate his $400,000 (£329,620) salary to charity at the end of 2017, his spokesman has confirmed.
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US comedienne Joan Rivers is "resting comfortably" and with her family after reportedly going into cardiac arrest during surgery on her vocal cords.
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Three US military trainers have been shot dead in an exchange of fire at an air base in Jordan, a US official says. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | Although Samsung predicts greater interest in its more conventionally designed S6 model, it is worried about the time it takes to manufacturer components for the distinctive wrap-around touch screen on the S6 Edge.
Experts say it could lead to consumers having to order and then wait for the model, and delay any fall in its price.
Samsung faces strong competition from Apple at the high-end of the market while much cheaper smart phones made in China challenge its position at lower price points.
Mobile analyst, Thomas Husson at Forrester told the BBC: "They [Samsung] will have a serious issue if the shortage is due to the difficulty of producing the curved screen.
"Samsung must succeed in the launch of these new flagship phones to regain leadership in the high-end segment. They have a window of opportunity until the new iPhone comes out. The product and design is great - but [it] lacks service differentiation."
A Samsung UK spokesperson told the BBC the company was "working hard" to fulfil pre-orders and sales "as soon as possible".
Two children videobombed their father's live interview on BBC News on Friday morning.
Professor Robert Kelly was speaking to BBC News about the political crisis in South Korea when there was an unexpected interruption from his children who were keen to share the spotlight.
As Professor Kelly described the region's geopolitics, a little girl in a yellow jumper opened the door and sauntered into his office.
She made herself comfortable next to her dad, as he valiantly continued his analysis.
BBC Presenter James Menendez, apparently tickled by the new guest, said "I think one of your children has just walked in".
Several seconds later a baby - who seems commendably independent - makes her way into the room in a baby walker.
Very keen to offer her view, she settles next to her dad at the desk.
The girls' mum eventually rescued the girls from their live broadcast, and Professor Kelly, who smiled and maintained his composure throughout, completed his interview about the ousting of South Korea's President Park Geun-Hye.
Many social media users have sympathy with Professor Kelly.
Beth Ortega said what many parents are thinking - "we laugh with you, mum and dad, because we've all been there in one way or another".
Chris said 'the baby cruising in had me in tears laughing'.
A video of the interruption posted on one account was retweeted 18 thousand times in the first couple of hours. | Samsung's new flagship mobile phones go on sale today but the company says it may struggle to meet demand for its S6 Edge model.
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Anyone with toddlers will sympathise with this experience. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | Fernando Collor de Mello (simply known as Collor) had won the votes of 53% of the electorate three years earlier, but was caught in a massive corruption scandal.
Mr Collor's impeachment was a clear-cut case. There was abundant proof of bribes paid to him and a smoking gun - a car that was bought with illegal money. Also Collor was part of a small political party with weak support both from Congress and the streets.
Twenty-four years later, Brazil has for the second time impeached a president. But this time the circumstances seem far less clear cut.
Although polls suggest there is ample rejection of Dilma Rousseff as a president, the question of whether she is guilty of a crime punishable with the loss of her mandate has proven explosively controversial in Brazil.
How did things get to this point and how will history look back on the impeachment of Brazil's first woman president?
Over the course of 18 months Ms Rousseff's condemnation in a trial in the Senate went from being highly unlikely to virtually inevitable.
The seeds of her impeachment were planted in the days after her victory by a small margin in the hard-fought 2014 presidential campaign. The opposition asked for a recount of votes and accused her campaign of funding irregularities.
Meanwhile, Ms Rousseff laid out her plans for the economy, which was already deteriorating rapidly at that stage. Despite her campaign hitting hard at those who proposed an austere fiscal adjustment of spending cuts, she adopted many of the very same measures she had demonised as a candidate.
Markets initially reacted with optimism to the appointment of her new economic team, but the opposition galvanised support from those who felt betrayed by her U-turn on the economy.
That feeling burst onto the streets three months after she was re-inaugurated, with hundreds of thousands of protestors marching against her government in dozens of cities. Many similar demonstrations would be repeated in the coming weeks.
New revelations of a corruption probe into the state oil company Petrobras caused even greater damage to her Workers' Party, with her political strategist and the party's treasurer being arrested. The company had to admit losses of $2bn (£1.5bn) due to corruption.
2015 proved to be disastrous for the economy and markets soon turned against her, as a rift became clear between two key ministers with opposing views on how to fix the problems.
Inflation spiked and millions lost their jobs, after a heavy contraction in consumption and investment. In September, Brazilian bonds were downgraded to junk by one credit ratings agency. Brazil's currency lost almost half of its value and the stock market reached its lowest level in seven years.
But still no crime had been directly imputed to Ms Rousseff, despite more than 30 requests having been filed in Congress asking for her impeachment, under various allegations.
That changed when a fiscal court rejected her 2014 government accounts, detecting a special manoeuvre that had been used to mis-state the size of the hole in the government's budget.
Those budget problems played a key role in raising Brazil's debt and undermining the confidence in the economy.
In December, a series of unexpected political events radically shifted the course of Ms Rousseff's political future.
Up until that point she still had the support of Eduardo Cunha, the speaker of the Lower House of Congress, who had the power to accept or veto all impeachment requests against her.
Mr Cunha was being investigated in an ethics committee in Congress for allegedly having secret bank accounts. Barely hours after three MPs from Ms Rousseff's Workers' Party said they would vote against Mr Cunha in the committee, the Speaker accepted an impeachment request against the president.
Ms Rousseff was accused of being directly responsible for continuing with the use of illegal fiscal manoeuvres.
The impeachment process became a high-stakes political game.
In March 2016, Ms Rousseff's junior coalition partner - the PMDB party - abandoned her, which significantly weakened her stance in Congress. Her vice-president, Michel Temer, started his own backstage campaign for office.
In one of the most controversial moves of her career, Ms Rousseff invited former president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, into her government. The ministerial position would grant him special prosecuting privileges, as he is the subject of three investigations into alleged corruption.
A court order, based on tapped conversations between Ms Rousseff and Mr Lula, blocked his return to Brasilia and caused havoc in the political scene. On 17 April, Ms Rousseff lost her first major battle in Congress, when 367 MPs approved the impeachment proceedings against her.
The Workers' Party, that for the past 13 years had built a strong coalition in Congress, garnered only 137 votes. On 12 May, Ms Rousseff was suspended by the Senate.
Ms Rousseff's trial in the Senate raised important questions about Brazil's democratic institutions. Was she ousted for having committed a crime - or was that just a pretext to remove a president who had lost control of the economy and politics?
Her fiscal manoeuvres were thoroughly examined during the sessions, but it wasn't just that crime that was on trial. Her government policies, her U-turn in the economy after the election and corruption in her party were constantly part of the debate.
Also, as the trial unfolded, Michel Temer's interim government started its work in reforming the economy and outlining new policies. Senators - and Brazilians - knew that the question of condemning Ms Rousseff went beyond just deciding technically whether she was guilty or not.
It also entailed choosing between two distinct projects for Brazil - which made this impeachment process seem at times more like an election.
Brazilian society is much more fragmented and divided today than it was after Mr Collor's impeachment. Polls suggest the majority of Brazilians do not want either Ms Rousseff or Mr Temer at the helm, and would much rather see new elections - although that option was never on the table.
The question of whether history will look back on this impeachment process as a positive or negative step for Brazil now depends on how Mr Temer handles all the issues where Ms Rousseff failed since her re-election in 2014 - fixing the economy and battling corruption in the government. | In 1992, senators and MPs in Brazil's Congress came together to impeach the country's first democratically elected president in almost 30 years. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Getting a letter of thanks from Judge Dredd is though.
Sylvester Stallone has written to the City of London Police's Intellectual Property Crime Unit after a man was arrested in Halifax on suspicion of leaking the Expendables 3, which Sly co-wrote and starred in.
The man is accused of leaking a series of Hollywood films, either pre-release or whilst they were in the cinema.
In a press release, the police unit, which operates nationwide, say it's estimated the suspect had already cost the film industry "millions of pounds".
The arrest on Thursday was the result of an investigation launched in July 2014 by the US Department of Homeland Security Investigations unit, who got a tip off from an industry insider.
After the raid, Sly thanked the police in both Britain and the US, saying: "It is important to protect the rights of creatives around the world from theft."
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Both have undergone operations, with Lewington, 24, having required knee ligament reconstruction surgery.
The winger is expected to be out of action for the majority of the season.
Brophy Clews, 19, had to go off with a foot injury after just 34 minutes of England under-20's World Rugby Championship game against Italy.
The fly-half will miss the first part of the season, but has set his sights on returning before Christmas.
Lewington, who scored five Premiership tries for The Exiles last season, was injured during England Saxons' 32-24 first Test victory against South Africa A.
"I'm really disappointed with the outcome of the injury," he said.
"But, I'm fully focussed on making a full recovery and contributing to London Irish later on in the season as we look to make an immediate return to the Premiership."
Tourists visiting the area in its busiest season have been told to leave and homes nearby have been evacuated.
The fire's been burning for a week and has tripled in size in the last twenty-four hours.
A state of emergency has been declared around the area.
The fires have not yet reached Yosemite and park officials say it's still open.
But the blaze has forced part of a motorway that leads to a park entrance, to shut.
In the state of Wyoming, wildfires have been burning near Yellowstone National Park.
Donald MacMillan, 73, and his wife Morag, 67, were found in the village of Gravir, in the South Lochs area of Lewis, on Friday morning.
Police Scotland said their deaths were being treated as "unexplained".
Officers are investigating how the couple came to be outside as temperatures fell below freezing overnight.
Police Scotland said in a statement: "The investigation into the circumstances of their deaths is continuing.
"The deaths of Mr and Mrs MacMillan continue to be treated as unexplained."
Tributes were paid to the couple, who ran the Post Office in the village, as the local community was said to be "in shock".
Western Isles councillor Catherine Macdonald said: "It's very sad. I was absolutely stunned when I heard. They were a very well-known couple who did a lot in their community."
John Randall, former vice-chairman of community organisation the Pairc Trust which counted the couple as members, said: "They were very nice and an active part of the local community here. They were very much respected by everyone - everyone's in shock."
The second-rower has been with Rovers for the past two seasons on loan from Catalans Dragons.
"I've been really looking forward to this news being announced because I love the club," Larroyer, 26, told the club website.
Coach Chris Chester added: "He's somebody with a lot of potential to develop and improve his game." | Arrests for pirating films are nothing unusual.
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London Irish players Theo Brophy Clews and Alex Lewington will both miss the start of next season after suffering serious injuries on international duty.
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Firefighters in the US are trying to control raging wildfires which have spread to the famous Yosemite National Park in California and now cover nearly 200 square miles.
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Police have named the couple who were found dead outside their home in the Western Isles.
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France international forward Kevin Larroyer has signed a three-year contract with Hull KR. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | The 26-year-old, released by Portsmouth in January before joining the U's on a six-month deal, scored once in 19 appearances for the club last season.
The former Arsenal trainee has made more than 250 career appearances for clubs including Exeter and Stevenage.
"He understands how we like to work and gives us good cohesion from last year's team," said boss Shaun Derry.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. | Cambridge United midfielder James Dunne has signed a new one-year contract with the League Two side. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | Women in England will be able to get Kadcyla through the Cancer Drugs Fund, but the price tag per patient - £90,000 at full cost - is too high to widen access, say the draft NICE guidelines.
NICE criticised manufacturer Roche for not making it more affordable.
Roche says discussions are continuing, meaning a resolution is still possible.
Kadcyla can add about six months of life to women with incurable disease.
It is used to treat people with HER2-positive breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body and cannot be surgically removed.
Roche, recently agreed a significant price discount with NHS England to stop the drug being taken off the Cancer Drugs Fund - a special fund set up by the government to help people in England access costly cancer drugs that are not routinely available on the NHS.
But the Swiss pharmaceutical company offered a different, smaller discount to NICE for regular NHS use of Kadcyla (Trastuzumab Emtansine) in England and Wales.
NICE says this undisclosed figure is still too high to justify against the drug's clinical merits.
Any person currently receiving the treatment can continue until they and their doctor consider it appropriate to stop, however.
Kadcyla is not available on the NHS in Scotland either.
Sir Andrew Dillon, NICE chief executive, said: "We recognise that Kadcyla has a place in treating some patients with advanced breast cancer, and we have been as flexible as we can in making our recommendation. However, the price that the manufacturer is asking the NHS to pay in the long term is too high."
Roche and other consultees now have until November 17 to challenge the draft guidance.
Roche said: "We need a unified approach, and, moving forward, it is imperative that we work together to build a pragmatic, flexible and sustainable system for assessing medicines that prioritises clinical value. Only then will we be able to ensure the best outcomes for people with cancer in the UK.
"This announcement comes less than two weeks after Kadcyla was retained on the Cancer Drugs Fund. Roche has demonstrated that, when given the opportunity to come to the table with all parties, we can come to an agreement and do the right thing for patients."
Dr Caitlin Barrand, from the charity Breast Cancer Now, said the news was hugely disappointing.
"It's time that the prime minister showed real leadership on this issue," she said.
"People living with incurable cancer don't have time to lose, and a fairer, more flexible system that enables access to the best treatments available on a routine, UK-wide basis is long overdue."
The Cancer Drugs Fund is due to end in March 2016. The government says a replacement is likely to be brought in from April 2016, although there are no details yet. | A life-extending breast cancer drug will not be routinely offered on the NHS in England and Wales because it is still too expensive, says a watchdog. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | Ministers were outvoted on plans to amend so-called "purdah" rules which limit government activity in the build-up to the in/out referendum.
They also agreed to a rebel Conservative amendment of a four-month notice period preventing a snap poll.
It came as the bill paving the way for the referendum cleared the Commons.
The EU Referendum Bill was backed by 316 votes to 53, meaning it will pass to the House of Lords for further scrutiny.
But this came after Conservative rebels and opposition from Labour and the SNP helped inflict a government defeat over the campaigning rules, by 312 to 285.
What is purdah?
Purdah is a long standing convention whereby governments refrain from making any major announcements in the run-up to general elections or other polls to avoid influencing their outcome.
The existing rules were set out in legislation passed in 2000. They prevent ministers, departments and local authorities from publishing any "promotional material" arguing for or against any particular outcome or referring to any of the issues involved in the referendum.
The rules, which apply to the 28 days up to polling day, do not preclude ministers from issuing press notices or responding to specific requests for information from members of the public.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Jenkin, who chairs the Commons Public Administration Committee, said he believed the Conservative Party should be neutral in the EU referendum, adding there was "little doubt" that most party members would vote to leave.
Referring to the original purdah proposals, he said it was "outrageous for the government to try to stack the deck like this".
He added: "We have got a step closer to a fairer referendum, and I think that's the kind of thing the British people want."
The purdah vote was a rejection of concessions made by David Cameron in response to Eurosceptic concerns the government could use the "Whitehall machine" to promote continued EU membership.
Ministers had agreed to restore purdah restrictions for the referendum but with certain exceptions to allow ministers and others to conduct day-to-day business with the EU during the campaign period.
During the debate, Europe Minister David Lidington said the package of proposals put forward by the government was "balanced and fair".
But he was accused by Tory Eurosceptic MP Sir Edward Leigh of offering "legalistic claptrap" in a bid to avoid a Commons defeat. Sir Edward said the process must be "considered to be fair" and argued for Labour's amendment - which reinstated the full purdah rules in the bill - to be accepted.
Analysis of the vote, which saw the government defeated by a majority of 27, showed the 37 Conservative rebels included five former Cabinet ministers: Liam Fox, John Redwood, Owen Paterson, Cheryl Gillan, and David Jones, and the chairman of the influential backbench 1922 Committee of Tory MPs, Graham Brady.
Commenting for Labour after the vote, shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn said the government had tried to play "fast and loose" with the arrangements for the referendum.
"This is a humiliating defeat for David Cameron, with members from all sides of the House supporting Labour's approach to purdah, which ensures fairness in the conduct of the referendum campaign while permitting normal government business to take place," Mr Benn said.
"The government should never have rushed through its flawed plans to play fast and loose with the rules on the referendum," he added.
Earlier in the debate, the government conceded on Mr Jenkin's amendment which would prevent a snap poll from being held by requiring four months' notice of how the final purdah rules would work.
Mr Lidington said that while there were "drawbacks" to having a firm time limit he would accept the amendment "in the interests of bridge-building".
No date has yet been set for the referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union but David Cameron has promised to hold the vote by the end of 2017. | The UK is "a step closer to a fairer referendum" on the EU following the Tory government's first Commons defeat, Eurosceptic MP Bernard Jenkin says. |
Please summarize the following text. | Media playback is unsupported on your device
30 July 2015 Last updated at 12:40 BST
On Thursday experts say amateur star-gazers have the best chance in years of seeing them in all their glory.
The powerful rays can interfere with airline navigation systems, satellites and even NASA space crews - so they all had to be on high alert.
But if you're wondering what causes the night sky to glow, check out Leah's report to find out more... | The Northern Lights are seen on Earth as spectacular splashes of colour in the night sky. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | Home strikers Graham Cummins, scorer of the game's only goal, and Chris Kane were the offenders against Hearts.
"It's not something I want, but it's quite ironic that it happens this week," Wright told BBC Scotland.
"If I think that the referee is spot on, the players will be fined. That's what we do here."
Hearts had Jamie Walker banned for diving against Celtic earlier in the season.
And last week Sam Nicholson won a penalty against Hamilton Accies and also successfully appealed against a booking for simulation received by Tony Watt.
Wright had said ahead of the arrival of the side sitting second in the Scottish Premiership that he would be working on his side "being disciplined in the final third" and that "certain teams and players go down too easily".
"We've won 1-0 and won 2-0 in the simulation stakes," he joked after the game against Hearts.
"I'll look at it. I've seen Graham Cummins, I've spoken to the referee about it.
"He said there is contact but he exaggerated the contact on him.
"We'll take it on the chin and the players will have to take it on the chin."
Hearts head coach Robbie Neilson had insisted before the game that his players won a higher share of awards because they were an attacking side.
"I'll stay quiet about this," he told BBC Scotland after the defeat by St Johnstone. "I don't like doing my talking in the media.
"It is up to other people to deal with their teams."
Neilson was ordered from the field of play during the second half at McDiarmid Park.
"I got sent to the stand for clapping a delivery into the box that I thought was really good," he insisted.
"The fourth official thought I was clapping sarcastically at the referee, so I think he's got his wires crossed a wee bit and saw something different to what happened.
"There was no swearing, there was no shouting, but's that's football - you'll have days when you clap a delivery and they'll pat you on the back and days when they'll put you to the stand.
"It was actually the fourth official - the referee had nothing to do with it." | St Johnstone manager Tommy Wright saw the irony in having two players booked for simulation against opponents he had accused of going down too easily. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Mohammad Kamaruzzaman of the Jamaat-e-Islami party was found guilty of genocide by a domestic war crimes tribunal in May 2013.
Kamaruzzaman, 62, was convicted of crimes including the killing of at least 120 unarmed farmers.
He had refused to seek clemency from Bangladesh's president.
Kamaruzzaman was the third most senior figure in Jamaat-e-Islami, an Islamist opposition party.
He is the second war crimes suspect in Bangladesh to be executed.
In December 2013 Abdul Kader Mullah, assistant secretary general of Jamaat-e-Islami since 2010 and a former editor of an Islamist newspaper, was hanged after being found guilty on five of six counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
Of the others who have been convicted:
Twenty-one members of the condemned man's family, including his wife and son, visited him in prison on Saturday afternoon.
There was tight security outside the jail ahead of the condemned man's execution, with large demonstrations and counter-demonstrations expected in support of and against the hanging.
Kamaruzzaman was the assistant secretary-general of the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party. He was found guilty in May 2013 of masterminding what the prosecution described as one of the bloodiest single episodes in the independence war.
The war crimes tribunal heard that he played a prominent role alongside Pakistani troops in the "slaughter" of at least 120 unarmed farmers in the remote northern village of Sohagpur which subsequently became known as the "village of widows".
Three women widowed as a result of the killings testified against Kamaruzzaman during his trial. They described how he led Pakistani troops to the village and helped the soldiers line up and execute the farmers.
Kamaruzzaman was found guilty on five out of seven charges of crimes against humanity, including the murder and torture of unarmed civilians. His lawyers insisted that he had not received a fair trial.
Civil war erupts in Pakistan, pitting the West Pakistan army against East Pakistanis demanding autonomy and later independence
Fighting forces an estimated 10 million East Pakistani civilians to flee to India
In December, India invades East Pakistan in support of the East Pakistani people
Pakistani army surrenders at Dhaka and its army of more than 90,000 become Indian prisoners of war
East Pakistan becomes the independent country of Bangladesh on 16 December 1971
Exact number of people killed is unclear - Bangladesh says it is three million but independent researchers say there were up to 500,000 fatalities
Court condemns Bangladesh Islamist
Bangladesh's watershed war crimes moment | An Islamist politician convicted of war crimes during Bangladesh's 1971 war of independence from Pakistan has been hanged at a prison in Dhaka. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | The defeat confirms they cannot qualify for the 2016 finals in Poland although Thursday's 47-23 loss to Italy had effectively ended their chances.
GB were just four goals down at the break, with seven from Steven Larsson helping the hosts stay in touch.
But the experienced visitors dominated the second half to take an easy win.
"My own performance was OK, but it was a shame that Greece man-marked me in the second half and took me out [of the game] - maybe I could have helped the other guys more," said Larsson, who top scored in the game with 10 goals.
GB, who sit bottom of Group B with no points, will round off their campaign with a trip to Italy in June.
They had already failed to reach the 2014 European finals in Denmark after finishing bottom of a four-team first-phase qualifying group in Italy last summer. | Great Britain's miserable European Championships qualification campaign continued with 32-20 defeat by Greece at Crystal Palace. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | The centres are at Oakhill, Buckinghamshire, and Medway, Kent. The sale - as part of a business review - includes its 13 children's homes.
A BBC Panorama investigation uncovered claims relating to the treatment of 10 boys at the Medway unit near Rochester.
The director of the facility stepped down at the end of January.
Undercover footage showed staff mistreating and abusing inmates, and boasting about using inappropriate techniques to restrain youngsters.
Other allegations included claims staff tried to hide their actions by ensuring they were out of shot from CCTV cameras.
Five men were arrested by Kent Police on suspicion of either child neglect or assault and bailed until April.
G4S sacked five members of staff. Three others are currently suspended.
The company runs residential children's homes through its children's services division, Homes2Inspire, in six English counties: Bedfordshire, Derbyshire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Staffordshire.
It also has a contract to run Rainsbrook secure training centre in Northamptonshire, which is currently being transferred to a new provider, MTC Novo.
A G4S spokesman said there had already been "a number of expressions of interest from parties" interested in buying the children's services business.
The company hopes to complete the process by the end of the year.
He said it would consider selling off the secure training centres individually or as part of a package with the children's homes.
The BBC's Home Affairs correspondent Danny Shaw said: "It's thought three of the providers that are expected to be in the running to take over the children's service contracts from G4S are Diagrama, originally founded in Spain; Ingeus, which runs probation services; and MTC Novo, which is taking over the Rainsbrook contract."
The announcement was welcomed by Andrew Neilson, director of campaigns at the Howard League for Penal Reform.
"These child jails have been the focus of much controversy... there is now an opportunity developing to close the secure training centres down completely.
"These centres are a failed model and this wise withdrawal from the market by G4S should not be followed up new private security companies coming in to replace them, with dubious track records abroad in the treatment of people in custody," he said. | Security company G4S is to sell its children's services business including the contract to manage two secure units - one at the centre of abuse claims. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Police were inspecting the shop for suspected stolen goods when they spotted the bicycle's "exceptional technical characteristics".
It belonged to a rider competing in the Vuelta a Espana race around Spain.
The bicycle was returned to its owner on Sunday, the final day of the race.
The bicycle belonged to an unnamed rider for the Australian team, Orica Greenedge.
A police statement (in Spanish) said the team had not yet had time to lodge a complaint for theft.
A Malaga resident "with a long police record" had sold the bicycle to the shop, the statement said.
"We are going to offer a jersey with stripes on to the person who stole the Orica Greenedge bike,'' police said on their official Twitter account (in Spanish). "His race ends in jail."
The Vuelta arrived in Malaga on 24 August, on the third stage of the three-week race. It finishes in the capital, Madrid, on Sunday. | A stolen bicycle worth €12,000 (£8,800; $13,600) has been recovered from a secondhand shop in the Spanish city of Malaga, where it was offered for sale at 1/100th of its value - €120. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Samarco - co-owned by Vale and BHP Billiton - will pay 2bn reais in 2016 and 1.2bn each in 2017 and 2018.
The Brazilian government originally demanded 20bn reais to address what is considered the country's worst environmental disaster.
The accident triggered a mudslide that killed 19 people.
The mudslide also wiped out entire districts and polluted a major river in south-east Brazil.
"This agreement demonstrates our commitment to repairing the damage caused and to contributing to a lasting improvement in the Rio Doce," Samarco said in a statement.
Under the terms of the agreement Brazilian Vale and Australian BHP Billiton will be jointly responsible for the payments if Samarco cannot make them.
The money is being divided into two categories - environmental restoration and compensation for communities.
In February, a police investigation determined Samarco executive had been negligent. Six of the mine's executives including its president were charged with homicide.
On Monday Chinese papers continued their admonishments, warning Ms Tsai and her DPP party against any move towards independence.
China sees the island as a breakaway province, which it has threatened to take back by force if necessary.
Before her win Ms Tsai said she wanted to maintain the "status quo".
But some analysts say her rhetoric has hardened somewhat in the wake of her victory, when she said that "any forms of suppression will harm the stability of cross-strait relations".
Her pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party beat the ruling Kuomintang, which has overseen friendlier and ever-closer ties with China on Saturday.
Two days later, on Monday, Ms Tsai met former US Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, and vowed to maintain close relations with the US in all areas, particularly the economy.
One report from the Reuters agency said that DPP Secretary General Joseph Wu would be going to the US.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also congratulated Ms Tsai on her victory, calling Taiwan "an old friend".
She has already set up a taskforce to oversee the transfer of power, Taiwan's third transition of power in its democratic history.
Chinese state media lashed out swiftly in the wake of the victory, saying that Taiwan should abandon its "hallucination" of independence.
On Monday, a Global Times report said it wasn't Ms Tsai's pro-independence views that won her the vote but the "dissatisfactory performance of the incumbent Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou and his ruling KMT".
"I will, based on the existing ROC constitutional system, based on democratic principles, on the basis of the largest public opinion, promote cross-strait policy.
"I will make the greatest efforts to seek a way for Taiwan and mainland China to interact that is mutually acceptable to both sides. I will not be provocative, there will not be any surprises."
"I also want to emphasise that both sides of the strait have a responsibility to find mutually acceptable means of interaction that are based on dignity and reciprocity. We must ensure that no provocations or accidents take place.
"The results of today's election showcases the will of the Taiwanese people. It is the shared resolve of Taiwan's 23 million people that the Republic of China is a democratic country.
"Our democratic system, national identity, and international space must be respected. Any forms of suppression will harm the stability of cross-strait relations.
The woman, who was in her mid 20s, had been playing the gaming app alone in Linacre Woods in Derbyshire on Wednesday afternoon.
She managed to call 999 using her telephone, and was later taken to hospital.
She had suspected injuries to her ankle, back, neck and elbow.
Edale Mountain Rescue Team helped the ambulance service with the rescue, assisted by members of Buxton Mountain Rescue Team.
"She told us and the ambulance service she had been playing Pokemon," said Ed Proudfoot from Edale Mountain Rescue Team.
"She suffered a slip and fall and was lying on the wet surface. That's going to cause you to get cold pretty quickly."
The woman was taken by ambulance to the major trauma centre at the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield for assessment and treatment.
Mr Proudfoot warned people enjoying the outdoors to be "mindful of the terrain and weather conditions they might encounter", especially this time of year.
He said they should wear proper footwear and waterproof clothing. | The owners of a Brazilian mine that suffered a dam burst, setting off a deadly mudslide, have agreed to pay 4.4bn reais (£804m) in damages.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Taiwan's Tsai Ing-wen is preparing for a historic transfer of power after her sweeping victory, amid strident warnings from Chinese state media.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Pokemon Go player needed saving by mountain rescue teams after she slipped over and was left with multiple injuries and hypothermia. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | The pair have been in temporary charge since Simon Petulla resigned in March, overseeing two defeats in friendlies.
Meanwhile, prolific striker Catarina Andrade and Amy Brown have withdrawn from the squad for Gotland, replaced by Fiona MacKinnon and Ella Brennand.
Jersey will look to defend the gold medal they won on home turf in 2015.
Jersey FA chief executive Neville Davidson told BBC Sport: "Jodie and Dan have come in and organised things.
"They did very well against Sheffield United Women and basically they're moving things forward.
"They've committed to Gotland and after that we'll all sit down and see if they want to continue." | Former Wales forward Jodie Botterill and Daniel Seviour will take joint-charge of Jersey's women's side at the upcoming Island Games. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Piero Mingoia's brilliant long-range equaliser in stoppage time was added to by Luke Berry's 118th-minute winner.
"There were some really mighty performances by everybody connected with the club," Derry said.
"As the game developed, and especially into extra time, I felt we deserved it and looked like the strongest side."
It was the first time the U's had won a League Cup tie in 14 years - the last victory coming against Reading in September 2002.
"I'd have been proud to take it to penalties and proud of my team regardless of how it would have ended after penalties," Derry added to BBC Radio Cambridgeshire.
"But to get the winning goal with a couple of minutes to spare that just tells everybody what we're about.
"We've got a desire and a togetherness that makes a manager very proud." | Cambridge United boss Shaun Derry has hailed his side after their extra-time win over Championship club Sheffield Wednesday in the EFL Cup. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | This article was first published on 1 November 2016 and should be treated as being dated 1 November 2016.
Paddy Jackson and Stuart Olding were two of three men questioned following an incident at a property in south Belfast on 28 June.
The arrests happened in June but details have just emerged.
Police said a file would be prepared for submission to the Public Prosecution Service.
Paddy Jackson, 24, was not included in the 27-man Ireland squad to face New Zealand this Saturday in Chicago for what an IRFU (Irish Rugby Football Union) press release described on Monday as "personal reasons".
Olding is currently out of action with a hip flexor injury.
Jackson has been capped for Ireland 16 times while centre Olding, 23, has played four times. The two Belfast men are established stars for Ulster Rugby and have played regularly this season.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said: "Police arrested two men aged 24 and one man aged 23 on Thursday 30 June in relation to a number of sexual offences, reported to have taken place at a property in south Belfast on 28 June.
"The men have been interviewed and released from custody. A file will be prepared for submission to the Public Prosecution Service (PPS).
"A fourth man aged 24, will be reported to the PPS in relation to this incident for perverting the course of justice."
Solicitors acting on behalf of Paddy Jackson and Stuart Olding released statements saying their clients rejected the allegations and had both co-operated fully with police.
Ulster Rugby also released a statement: "Paddy Jackson and Stuart Olding have been assisting the PSNI with enquiries," it read.
"The players deny any wrongdoing and have not been charged with any offence. As no charges have been brought forward, it would be inappropriate to comment further." | Two Ulster rugby players have been questioned by police about alleged sex offences. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | The Lincolnshire racer will ride a Triumph Daytona 675 for Team T3 Racing - the same bike his last TT win came on in 2014 for Smiths Racing.
Johnson will represent the three time British Supersport Cup Champions in both 600cc races.
"It's great to be back on a Triumph 675," the 35-year-old said.
"I have a wealth of knowledge on the bike and I hope to replicate the success of 2014 this year.
"I'm eager to get going as we have a busy testing schedule ahead to be fully prepared for first practice in June".
David Smith, 62, a fantasist who claimed he was an ex-SAS hero, made Elizabeth Smith so ill she thought she was dying.
The sheriff in Ayr said Smith, from Telford, was guilty of a "prolonged and evil course of criminal conduct".
Smith had told his wife a string of lies, including that he carried out the SAS raid on the Iranian Embassy.
He was previously convicted of culpably and recklessly administering laxative substances over a three-year period from 2012-2015.
Sheriff John Montgomery said Smith's conduct had caused "physical and mental anguish" to his victim.
He made her so ill she said doctors believed she may have motor neurone disease.
Smith also falsely told his 62-year-old wife he owned a factory that made secret-component parts for the MoD and that his first wife was a professional ballerina who had died while carrying their unborn child.
His stories unravelled after he staged a break-in at their home.
When she first met him, Mrs Smith thought he was an "absolute gentleman".
"He was just a normal, lovely guy," she told BBC Scotland.
"He was a family man - a wonderful man who came across as so genuine and real."
She added: "He's a 100% 'Walter Mitty character'. He has got caught up completely in his web of lies.
"I want people to be aware that there are people like this out there and they are very, very dangerous men.
"He has taken away five years of my life. It's heartbreaking." | Two-time TT winner Gary Johnson has said he is "excited" after announcing a return to Triumph machinery at the 2016 event.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A "Walter Mitty character" who poisoned his wife with laxatives has been jailed for three and a half years. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Bill Sharp, 65, was the the son of a unionised stevedore who loaded and unloaded the ships at the East End's Royal Albert docks.
He left grammar school at the age of 15 wanting something more. And he got it - a career in the City and the trappings which come with it.
Now living in Hadleigh near Southend, he continues to run his stockbroking firm and work as a consultant.
For Mr Sharp, taking his place outside St Paul's Cathedral to say a final farewell was a foregone conclusion.
He allowed BBC News to join him on his journey from Essex to central London as Margaret Thatcher was his political inspiration.
"She means a great deal to me," he said. "It was in about 1970 that I started to recognise her.
"I became a councillor back in 1978 based on listening to her.
"She wasn't the first woman prime minister to me, she was the leader of our party and she did a wonderful job."
Their paths were to cross a number of times.
Mr Sharp made three visits to Downing Street during her tenure, enjoyed a dinner in her company (with others) and was at the Conservative Party conference in 1984 at Brighton's Grand Hotel when five people were killed and 31 were injured.
An aspiring politician, Mr Sharp had put his name down to speak on five different subjects. He ended up speaking about the community charge (often referred to as the poll tax) - the subject he had prepared least for.
But it was the speech the prime minister delivered the day after the bomb that he remembers most vividly.
"The speech was magnificent. There was an explosion of support for her," he said.
"I am delighted to be able to say that I met her, shook her hand, listened to her and was told off by her, and followed her principles through my life."
Mr Sharp is proud of the parallels between his own humble upbringing and those of Margaret Thatcher, the grocer's daughter.
He said: "She was wealthy compared with my family roots.
"My father was a union man, I understand unionism but I didn't find socialism the answer. If you go out and work, you can contribute to your family."
While the then Margaret Roberts lost out when she contested the parliamentary seat of Dartford in the 1950 and 1951 general elections, Mr Sharp unsuccessfully fought the Barking seat just across the Thames in 1987.
His campaign slogan was simple: "She trusts him, why don't you?" The she, of course, was Baroness Thatcher.
Since then, Mr Sharp has focused on local politics and continues to serve on Castle Point Borough Council.
He said: "I will be standing there with sympathy in my heart, and gratitude for what she did for this nation, for what she did for me personally and for what she did for the party.
"People either loved her or hated her. A bit like me." | Among the thousands who lined the streets of London to witness the funeral procession of Baroness Thatcher was a self-confessed "Essex Man" who has a picture of the former prime minister in his bedroom. |
Summarize the following piece. | Robin Garton, 69, from Devizes, Wiltshire, has not been seen since 25 September.
He disappeared while on a hillwalking trip in the north west Highlands.
Extensive searches have been made of Glen Coe since then involving helicopters, mountain rescue teams and search dogs.
Police divers have made searches of the River Coe.
Mr Garton, a former art dealer and the founder of a climate change charity, is described as 6ft 2in tall, of slim to medium build, with fair, thinning hair. He occasionally wears glasses. | Members of Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team plan to make a fresh search this weekend for a hillwalker who was last seen a month ago. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | After six years of waiting for the president's promise to overhaul the country's immigration system, Latinos listened carefully as he announced sweeping measures to protect up to five million undocumented migrants from being deported.
Defying the wintry weather, many supporters met in front of the White House waving American flags and carrying signs that read "Gracias, Presidente Obama," while others gathered around the country to watch and discuss the announcement.
Hispanic advocacy organisations quickly reacted to the news. It was "a positive first step in putting our nation on a path that will benefit all Americans," according to the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO).
The unilateral actions are definitely important, not only for the Hispanic community but for the many families around the country who will be shielded from deportation.
A detailed look at President Obama's speech reveals that this is about much more than just immigration. It touches on highly sensitive issues for the United States, such as national security, border protection and economic development.
It also has the potential to influence not only Mr Obama's domestic agenda in his remaining two years in office, but more importantly the 2016 presidential campaign, where Democratic and Republican hopefuls will be vying for the increasingly influential Hispanic vote.
At the same time, though, Thursday's announcement is not a permanent change to what President Obama has called the country's "broken" immigration system, nor does it offer a path to citizenship.
Moreover, the move covers only a portion of the country's undocumented population (five million out of an estimated 11 million), and also falls short of the eight million that was mentioned as part of the 2013 bill that passed in the Senate but stalled in the House of Representatives.
Even though they can bring about important policy change, executive actions are by definition limited in scope and in time, and the White House knows that the only way that the system can be changed in a permanent way is through Congress.
Hispanic groups are aware of that too, and many have been pressing for broader action from both the White House and Congress.
Voto Latino, an organisation focussed on Latino youth, described President Obama's measures as "legally and morally right, but not enough," and added they were "deficient in its scope."
Meanwhile, Hector Sanchez, chair of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda, said he will "obviously continue to fight so that there can be a legislative solution."
"This move can spark Congress to finally act," he told the BBC shortly before President Obama's announcement.
But it is precisely in Congress where Thursday's measures will face their biggest challenge.
Republicans have gained control of both houses of Congress and have promised to fight this executive action vehemently.
On Friday, John Boehner, the speaker of the House of Representatives, told reporters that Mr Obama had acted unilaterally "like a king or emperor" and vowed that his party would "rise to this challenge."
"With this action, the president has chosen to deliberately sabotage any chance of enacting bipartisan reforms that he claims to seek," Mr Boehner added.
The big question now is whether and to what extent Republicans will be able to block or delay President Obama from delivering his promise to millions of undocumented immigrants in the US.
Immigrants who have waited for six years for action may find themselves waiting longer.
Great Britain's Ryan will face Charlene Jones in the British Championships in Sheffield on Wednesday as she fights for the women's Lightweight title.
The 22-year-old told BBC Radio Derby: "You have to sacrifice a lot. You do think 'what if I lived a normal life?'
"I just say to myself 'suffer now and live the rest of your life a champion', that's what Muhammad Ali said."
Ryan, who is hoping to represent Great Britain at next year's Olympic Games in Rio, won a bronze medal at the European Games in Baku earlier this year.
The Derby boxer has already beaten her Welsh opponent twice, but Ryan is taking nothing for granted against Jones.
"She's very game. She will keep coming forward but I am looking to get the third win," Ryan added.
"I look back at videos with the coaches. Just because you've had a win against someone, you can't take it for granted.
"They could come with another game plan, so you have to be prepared." | President Barack Obama's prime-time immigration speech on Thursday night was one of the most-anticipated moments for the United States' large Hispanic community.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Derby boxer Sandy Ryan says the sacrifices she has had to make will be worth it if it makes her a champion. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | A woman, also in her 20s, was punched in the face during the incident in the Castle Street/King Street area at about 12:00 BST on Monday afternoon.
Police have said the man suffered two stab wounds to his body.
His injuries are not thought to be life-threatening.
Ryan Williams, 22, of Haydon Grove, St Budeaux, Plymouth, changed his plea at Plymouth Crown Court.
A second man, Donald Pemberton, 21, continues to deny murdering Tanis Bhandari.
The court heard Mr Bhandari was stabbed twice and died after he left a pub in Tamerton Foliot, in Devon.
Mr Williams also pleaded guilty to three counts of wounding with intent, and one count of assault occasioning bodily harm.
Mr Pemberton denies three counts each of wounding with intent, and one count of actual bodily harm, in relation to four other men who were injured.
Mr Williams' sentencing has been adjourned until the end of the trial.
The case continues. | A man in his 20s has been taken to hospital after he was stabbed during an incident in Belfast city centre.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man accused of killing a builder on New Year's Day has pleaded guilty to his murder halfway through his trial. |
Summarize the following piece. | As well as online, all three BBL and WBBL finals days - the Cup (15 January), the Trophy (19 March) and the Play-off finals (14 May) - will also be shown on the Red Button.
The website and app will broadcast all the league matches in addition to the cup finals, while coverage will also be available on selected connected TVs.
In total, eight WBBL regular season games will be shown.
Follow #theBBL and #theWBBL across social media channels to keep up to date with all the latest news from both leagues.
Find out how to get into basketball with our special guide.
The fireworks will be at 21:00, 22:00 and 23:00, followed by the midnight spectacular from Edinburgh Castle and Calton Hill.
The midnight display is five minutes long, with many fireworks fired at the same time.
If each effect were fired individually, the display would last for four hours.
And officials said that if the lift height of each effect was measured and added together the combined reach would stretch from Edinburgh to Paris.
John McDonnell said his proposals would make the freeze "irrelevant", but did not say whether he would scrap it.
Later though, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told Sky News the freeze was "unfair" and "would be ended".
The party's manifesto includes pledges costing £48.6bn, to be funded from extra tax revenue.
Labour says all its pledges are costed, with fundraising measures including a rise in income tax for higher earners, a corporation tax rise, a crackdown on tax avoidance and an "excessive pay levy" on salaries above £330,000.
But the Conservatives have said Labour would have to raise taxes dramatically for working families in order to fund their spending commitments.
According to their manifesto, the Conservatives have "no plans for further radical welfare reform" and would continue the roll-out of Universal Credit - a single monthly payment to replace many other benefits.
The Liberal Democrats have said they would end the benefits freeze and reverse welfare cuts.
The freeze on working-age benefits, which came into force in 2016, sees most payments capped at their current rate until 2019.
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, Mr McDonnell said the proposals the party was putting forward "would ensure that in effect we would be addressing this issue of how we reverse the benefit freeze itself".
"I want to do it as part of an overall reform package and not just pick off one by one."
He said: "We're putting £30bn in over the lifetime of a Parliament into welfare, we're reforming the whole process... and the implication of that will be... the impact of these proposals will make the freeze irrelevant because we'll reform the whole process."
Labour's manifesto includes plans to scrap the so-called bedroom tax, restore housing benefit for those under 21 and increase Personal Independence Payments for the disabled.
When pushed about what level of economic growth would be needed for Labour to deliver its plans, Mr McDonnell insisted the party's proposals were "completely cost neutral... because for everything you put in, you get the money back".
Mr McDonnell rejected Resolution Foundation findings that 78% of Conservative cuts would not be reversed under Labour proposals.
He said his strength of feeling on this issue was such that he would deliver the reforms in the first Budget.
Mr Corbyn told Sky News: "Yes, the freeze would be ended because it's very, very unfair on those people in receipt of those benefits."
He said £2bn had been set aside "as a start" and "obviously we would review it as time goes on".
Asked about immigration, Mr Corbyn said a Labour government would deliver a "fair" system, but would not be drawn on whether he personally wanted to see numbers rise or fall.
He said net migration would "probably be lower" in the future, but added: "I want us to have a society that works and I cannot get into a numbers game because I don't think it works."
Conservative Work and Pensions Secretary Damian Green described Labour's economic policies as "nonsensical".
Mr Green told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show: "The way Labour approaches any problem is to say: There is a magic money tree... we don't need to reform anything, we don't need to change anything, we just need to take money off businesses and people, and that solves the problem." | The BBC will show 32 British Basketball League (BBL) and Women's British Basketball League (WBBL) games live on the BBC Sport website and app this season.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The skyline of Edinburgh is set to be lit up by four official fireworks displays as part of the city's Hogmanay extravaganza.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Labour would "in effect" end the freeze on benefits through a package of reforms in its first Budget in government, the shadow chancellor says. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Premiership
Celtic 3-0 Inverness Caledonian Thistle
Dundee 2-0 Motherwell
Heart of Midlothian 2-2 St Johnstone
Kilmarnock 0-0 Hamilton Academical
Championship
Ayr United 0-3 Hibernian
Dunfermline 0-0 Raith Rovers
Falkirk 1-1 Greenock Morton
Queen of the South 1-4 Dundee United
St Mirren 0-1 Dumbarton
Premiership
Ross County 1-1 Rangers | Match reports for the weekend matches in the Scottish Premiership and Championship. |
Summarize the passage below. | A ship dragging its anchor on the seabed in the English Channel cut the three main internet cables to the Channel Islands on Monday.
Repair work on the first cable is expected to take a week.
Daragh McDermott from government owned JT said broadband speeds are expected to be slower during peak times.
A second ship is on the way from France to repair the second cable and JT says the third cable will be repaired after that.
Jersey's coastguard said there will be an investigation to see if the ship dropped anchor in a banned area.
Owners of the King Arthur, Mediterranea di Navigazione, said they were investigating whether it was their ship that caused the problem.
Three cables went one after the other on Monday with the first going at 16:00 GMT and the last by 21:00 GMT as the anchor was dragged across the seabed.
Mr McDermott said: "Thanks to the actions taken since the cables were cut, we have capacity in place to manage demand, although we have obviously lost spare capacity should further issues arise." | A specialist ship has arrived at the site of one of three broken undersea internet cables to begin repairs, according to telecoms company JT. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Mehmet Hassan, 56, was bound with parcel tape and a neck tie and then kicked and stamped to death in his north London flat in March 2014.
The court was told the attackers then ransacked his Islington home after care assistant Leonie Granger let them in.
Mr Hassan met Miss Granger at a Mayfair casino the month before, jurors heard.
While he lay dead Miss Granger, 25, of Gillingham, Kent, and her accomplices were filmed on her mobile phone throwing £50 notes around and stuffing wads in underpants, the court heard.
Prosecutor Crispin Aylett QC said: "While Mr Hassan's body lay undetected in his flat, his killers were literally throwing his money around."
Miss Granger is on trial at the Old Bailey accused of murder and false imprisonment, which she denies.
Her boyfriend Kyrron Jackson, of Romborough Way, Lewisham, and his friend Nicholas Chandler, of Lee High Road, south-east London, both 28, are further accused of robbing Mr Hassan.
They are also accused of two counts of plotting to rob employees of Grosvenor Casinos, two counts of conspiracy to have a shotgun and imitation firearm, and two counts of conspiracy to falsely imprison.
They also deny the charges against them.
Mr Hassan was described as a professional gambler who sometimes won as much as £15,000 at a time.
The divorced father-of-three also "enjoyed the company of women", making him "vulnerable to the unscrupulous", Mr Aylett said.
He told the court: "The truth, sadly, is that Miss Granger was not interested in Mehmet Hassan for anything other than his money. And that is how Mehmet Hassan came to be tied up and kicked to death in his own flat."
The court heard on the evening of 23 March, Miss Granger met the victim for a drink before going on to the Palm Beach Casino, Mayfair, where they were seen kissing passionately.
They left before midnight and went back to Mr Hassan's flat. About half an hour later, Mr Hassan booked a minicab, which took Miss Granger to an address in Lewisham.
The court was told the cab driver overheard her on her phone exclaiming: "Swear down. I don't believe it. Don't tell me the money's not there. I saw it. Look in the drawer. Look under the cabinet."
The jury was told she was speaking to someone using Mr Hassan's phone, suggesting it was one of her conspirators who had planned to go to the flat and overpower Mr Hassan.
His body was found by police on the evening of 24 March after his sister became concerned about his welfare.
The prosecutor told the jury that Mr Hassan's death was the "culmination of the ruthless greed" of Mr Jackson and Mr Chandler, who had been involved in two armed robberies at the same casino in South Kensington in January and February 2014.
The trial continues. | A professional poker player was killed for his winnings after being lured into a honey trap by a young woman, a court has heard. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Media playback is not supported on this device
The initiative is aimed to inspire children aged from five to eight to pick up a racquet for the first time.
It offers a free six-week course led by specially trained coaches with free racquets given away.
Additional courses are now being made available and the LTA is offering 4,000 more kids the opportunity to enjoy tennis for the first time.
The LTA says more than half of the 13,290 who took part in 2016 continued to play after completing the course and encouraged friends to sign up.
"Tennis for Kids gets kids involved," said Britain's number one female tennis player Johanna Konta
"It gets them outside, or inside, but just generally active. Also, it's for free, and you get a free racquet, which I think is very exciting, so, there's no excuse not to get involved."
Find out how to get into tennis in our special guide.
As the courses are designed for children taking up tennis, exercises focus on core skills such as agility, balance and co-ordination.
Beyond the practical side of the sport, the sessions also teach children how to work with a partner and become a valuable member of a team.
The initiative was set up two years ago on the back of Great Britain's Davis Cup triumph as part of a plan to build on their success by encouraging a potential wave of young tennis players across the country.
"Demand for places has been sky high," added LTA director of participation Alistair Marks.
"It's great we can make more available for parents still hoping to book their kids onto courses.
"Nothing is more important to us than inspiring a future generation to take up tennis and get involved in a sport that they can continue to enjoy throughout their lives."
Find out more about how you sign up to the Tennis for Kids campaign here.
Media playback is not supported on this device | The Tennis for Kids campaign has hit its target of 20,000 free lessons, the Lawn Tennis Association has announced. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | The pair got stuck in a pond while walking around Oldbury Court Estate and are believed to have been there for an hour before being aided.
Avon Fire and Rescue Service said the man, thought to be in his 40s, and his daughter, aged about 11, were unharmed.
An inflatable walkway was used to reach the pair who had to be dug out before being taken to safety.
Oldbury Court Estate, which is owned by Bristol City Council, covers 300 acres (121 hectares) of parkland including woods, riverside paths and children's play areas. | A father and his young daughter have been rescued from waist-deep mud in a Bristol park. |
What is the summary of the following article? | The 24-year-old centre-back has been offered "improved" terms at the League Two Chairboys but is yet to extend his stay at Adams Park.
Pierre has played 149 times for Wycombe since joining from Brentford in 2014 but has spent the last week on trial at Lee Johnson's Championship side.
He is set to feature in their friendly against Guernsey FC on Saturday.
Wycombe manager Gareth Ainsworth previously described Pierre, who has been capped four times by Grenada at international level, as "probably the best centre-half in League Two". | Bristol City have confirmed they are looking at out-of-contract Wycombe Wanderers defender Aaron Pierre. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Officers of the animal welfare charity were called after the chicks were left in a field near Crowland on Friday.
Insp Justin Stubbs of the RSPCA said: "I have never seen anything like it; it was just a sea of yellow. And the noise was unbelievable."
He said some birds were dead but most "did not appear to be suffering".
"For someone to dump these vulnerable chicks is unbelievable," he added.
There were between 1,500 and 1,800 chicks dumped, of which about 30 were dead or dying, the RSPCA said.
Some of the birds had to be humanely put down.
Insp Stubbs said: "These chicks were just all huddled together, just a mass, a writhing mass of cheeping yellow fluffy balls, where they shouldn't be, in conditions they should not be out in.
"The sick ones sadly had to be put to sleep. They were literally dying of exposure.
"I've never known anything so ridiculous. We get a lot of animals dumped in a lot of numbers, 80 here, 100 there, of mice, guinea pigs, rabbits.
"But 1,800 chicks, I'm never going to get over the number and the vulnerability of these particular animals."
It is not yet known if the chicks came from a nearby commercial producer or if they were abandoned by someone else.
People in the area helped round up the birds into boxes and a breeder collected the survivors and took them back to his unit.
The RSPCA said the chick producer was co-operating with its investigation.
On Friday the prosecutor mentioned the names of several witnesses, thinking the microphones were off.
The blunder took place during the trial of former Ivorian president Laurent Gbagbo for crimes against humanity, charges he denies.
The judge said he did not know whether it was "recklessness, superficiality or stupidity" that caused the mistake.
Presiding Judge Cuno Tarfusser added that he did not want to "speculate about something else".
The ICC has ordered a formal inquiry.
What is the International Criminal Court?
The BBC's Anna Holligan in The Hague reports that the incident was relayed to the public gallery and the recordings have since spread on social media, and even appeared on YouTube.
Our correspondent adds that protecting witnesses is one of the key promises of the ICC, and the court goes to great lengths to shield the identities of sensitive witnesses from the public by pixellating their faces and disguising their voices.
In some cases, witnesses are even moved to a new country and given a new identity.
This is the highest profile trial yet for the ICC, which has only convicted two people, both Congolese warlords, since its establishment in 2002.
Mr Gbagbo, 70, and ex-militia leader Charles Ble Goude, 44, deny murder, rape, attempted murder and persecution in the violence after Ivory Coast's election in 2010.
Mr Gbagbo sparked a crisis in Ivory Coast after he refused to step down following his loss to Alassane Ouattara in the presidential vote.
There were bloody clashes between rival forces over five months in 2010 and 2011.
Some 3,000 people were killed.
At the start of the trial the prosecution said it planned to bring forward 138 witnesses.
The trial is expected to last three to four years.
Who is Laurent Gbagbo?
Seven things to know about Ivory Coast | Up to 1,800 "vulnerable" day-old chicks have been abandoned in a field in Lincolnshire, sparking an RSPCA investigation.
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The International Criminal Court (ICC) has apologised after the public gallery heard the names of protected witnesses. |
Summarize the passage below. | Sophia Cahill, of Torfaen, said Mr Bowers had hit her in the face, pulled her hair and squeezed her throat.
District Judge Andrew Sweet told the former Another Level star he was "satisfied that he assaulted her in the manner she described".
Bowers, who will be sentenced next month, told Croydon Magistrates' Court he was acting in self-defence.
He accepted he made contact with her during a scuffle at his parents' home, but said it was accidental, the court heard.
Judge Sweet said he had not ruled out the possibility of a prison sentence and adjourned the case for sentencing until 15 October. | Pop singer Dane Bowers has been convicted of assaulting his beauty queen ex-girlfriend. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Angela Merkel is a texter: she does it all the time. There she is during a debate, thumbs going furiously.
Sometimes she texts colleagues across the chamber, and then looks up and catches their eye to check they have got the message.
In her office in the Kanzleramt - the Chancellery - it lies on the floor, charging. But the rest of the time, it is not far from her hand.
Since she has learnt that others might be reading her messages at the National Security Agency in Maryland outside Washington, she has said that she doesn't plan to change her habits.
An enterprising German company has marketed what it calls the Chancellor Phone - one so secure that prying eyes and ears cannot intrude.
The chancellor will no doubt use the Chancellor Phone - but you cannot doubt that recent events have shaken her.
In Germany, particularly in East Germany where Angela Merkel grew up, people feel strongly about the state tapping phones and bugging rooms.
In the east of Berlin, an amazing complex of buildings houses what was once the headquarters of the ministry of state security, the Ministerium fur Staatssicherheit - the Stasi.
Today, the headquarters is a museum and a home for the vast archive where East Germans can learn who spied on whom.
One Berlin politician learnt after the Berlin Wall came down that her husband had spied on her. She divorced him.
The offices themselves now display all the paraphernalia of eavesdropping - the hollow tree-trunks with a hole for the camera; the jacket buttons that turn out to be lenses. The spying of the past is there for all to see.
When communism collapsed, there were 91,000 people working for the Stasi.
It is easy to find maps showing old Stasi premises, and just in the area where I live in Berlin, there are seven places used by the spooks of the Stasi - seven secret flats within an area not much bigger than a football field. That's how pervasive spying on citizens was.
Just behind where I live, 79 Dunckerstrasse was, it turns out, rented by the Stasi.
At the end of my square - Helmholzplatz - there was an apartment which purported to be for students but which was actually the place where one Major Grabner and his colleague, Wolf, met informers.
At the other end of the square, there is now a bright blue door between a second-hand clothes shop and a chi-chi restaurant. This used to be the door through which informers would go.
Everybody knew what was going on. After all, Chancellor Kohl used to go off to telephone boxes to make sensitive calls when he was the leader of West Germany - he assumed the official phones he used might be tapped by the East German authorities.
So when Angela Merkel says now that friends do not spy on friends, she means what she says. She knows about it.
But perhaps Chancellor Merkel has just been too trusting despite growing up in a police state. I've noticed how she seems to have far less security in general than do other world leaders.
I once went to a meeting she was addressing, a big meeting with demonstrators. One man was striding up and down along the entrance hall, waiting for her. He had a long stick with a banner on the end of it.
I can remember thinking as she was about to arrive that he was not going to be allowed to remain there, right on her route as she walked by.
And sure enough, the police went up to him. There was a long discussion. But instead of him being carted off, as would have happened in the United States or, I think, Britain, he was told that the big stick was a problem.
He was welcome to stay and wave the banner in her face, but not with the stick.
I found that refreshing. And also the way she keeps texting.
What did the Americans learn? Only they know. It would be nice to think that it was nothing more useful than: "I'll be back from Brussels later, dear. Why don't you get a couple of schnitzel from the corner shop?" | Texting is frowned upon in the Bundestag - but not if you're the chancellor of Germany. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Officers searched the car after detecting a smell of the drug and found it stashed in two black plastic bags.
Adeel Ahmad, 25, of Blackburn, admitted being concerned in the supply of cannabis in June last year.
Sheriff Brian Mohan said the value of the haul meant custody was the only option and jailed him for 15 months.
Fiscal depute Marion Haig told Dumfries Sheriff Court that Ahmad had told the police he was acting as a courier to pay off a debt and that this was his first trip. | A court has heard how a routine road check on the A74(M) motorway near Lockerbie landed police a haul of cannabis worth up to £19,000. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | Skelton, who co-presented the BBC's swimming and diving coverage at the Olympics in Rio, will fill the hot seat on Lorraine from 24 to 28 October.
The 33-year-old said was "so excited" to filling Kelly's shoes and looking forward to the show's cookery items.
Lady Gaga, James Arthur, Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Jodie Kidd will be among her celebrity guests.
She will also speak to former Coronation Street star Tracy Brabin, Labour's candidate for the Batley and Spen by-election prompted by the killing of Jo Cox.
Fiona Phillips, Gaby Roslin and Lisa Snowdon took turns to host Lorraine when Kelly, 56, took time off in August.
Follow us on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, on Instagram at bbcnewsents, or if you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | Ex-Blue Peter presenter Helen Skelton is to host Lorraine Kelly's ITV chat show when Kelly goes on holiday. |
Please summarize the following text. | Cities and towns across the continent are plastered with signs and posters advertising churches, usually with apocalyptic names, promising instant cures and salvation from every intractable situation or sickness.
The churches are usually led by charismatic pastors, who set up their own churches rather than joining an established institution, and often claim to have miraculous powers.
However, the miracles are however tied to worshippers "planting a seed" - or giving money to the preachers.
Here are some of Africa's more controversial preachers:
Pastor Lesego Daniel heads the Rabboni Ministries based in South Africa's capital, Pretoria.
He famously instructed members of his congregation to drink petrol, claiming that he had turned it into pineapple juice.
A video shared online shows a worshipper pouring the petrol into a pan and then lighting it to prove that it is combustible.
He then sips from the bottle and declares that "he feels fine and does not have any side effects" when the pastor enquires about the taste.
A woman then rushes to the pulpit to have a sip of the drink and then declares it is "sweet" - an enticing assessment that gets a group of women rushing to the pulpit to have a taste.
However, the video shared on the church's YouTube account did have a warning message:
"The level of anointing is not the same. If you cannot turn water into wine, do not try this at home."
Penuel Mnguni is only 25 yet has been running the End Times Disciples Ministries church since 2014.
He is a protege of Lesego Daniel, the South African pastor who used pesticide in his healing rituals.
In the same year he opened his church, pictures of worshippers eating grass and flowers on his orders were shared on Facebook and on the church's website.
Other images showed the self-proclaimed prophet feeding his members stones which he claimed to have turned into bread.
He earned his nickname "snake pastor" last year after pictures emerged of him feeding his followers snakes and rats, which he claimed had been turned into chocolate.
Locals later chased him out of Soshanguve, a township north of Pretoria where his church was located.
In Ghana, Bishop Daniel Obinim of International Godsway Ministries has an expansive list of rituals which he uses in various cases.
In one incident, which was widely shared he was shown stepping on the abdomen of a woman, who was reportedly pregnant, to exorcise her from being possessed by evil spirits.
In another case in June, he is seen grabbing men's crotches, saying this would heal their erectile dysfunction.
The men obediently stand in line, with their arms raised in their air, waiting for their turn to be touched by the preacher.
This seems to be the restrained version of his prayer said to cure men suffering from impotence.
In another video shared online last year he is seen praying over a man whose penis is exposed.
More recently, he was seen flogging a young woman and man during a service for allegedly having extra-marital sex.
One of the preacher's aides is shown holding the woman as she attempts to run away.
The pastor is then seen lashing out at the woman repeatedly with a belt, while the church members remain seated.
Media reports say that a court in the capital Accra has issued a warrant of arrest for the pastor and two of his associates for allegedly "flogging the two teenagers in church".
An investigation by Kenya's KTN TV station in November 2014 exposed the tricks Victor Kanyari, a famous televangelist, was allegedly using to fool worshippers at his Salvation Healing Ministry church.
He used potassium permanganate, a chemical compound that easily dissolves in water to give a reddish solution, to wash the feet of his members and then claim that blood was oozing from their feet as a sign of healing.
One of his former aides demonstrated how the preacher performed the trick.
Another video shows him putting his hand under a woman's dress to touch her breast, saying this would cure her from breast cancer.
The woman is seen turning away from the camera but the preacher forces her to turn around to face the congregation as he exposes her breast for all to see. He then calls for a church worker to anoint the "diseased" breast with oil.
The investigation said Kanyari was the son of "Prophetess" Lucy Nduta, another controversial pastor who was convicted in 2009 for "defrauding vulnerable people" claiming she could cure them from Aids.
Shortly afterwards, he appeared on another TV programme, saying his "tribulations" were the work of his enemies.
Kanyari is still preaching. | The revelation that a South African pastor has been spraying insecticide on his church members in a healing ritual has shocked many but he is not the only self-styled pastor in Africa to resort to highly questionable practices. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | 2 January 2016 Last updated at 17:05 GMT
The coastguard service said the woman became trapped after going after her dog which ran into the mud.
A helicopter had to be sent from Humberside to assist with the New Year's Day rescue because local teams could not reach her on the ground in the soft mud.
Keith Griffin, of the Happisburgh and Mundesley Coastguard rescue team, said: "The rope rescue technicians were able to recover the dog just as the helicopter arrived on scene.
"The casualty was winched and taken to a place of safety on the cliff top and handed over to waiting ambulance crews." | A woman, believed to be in her 40s and from Cambridge, was winched to safety by helicopter after getting into difficulties at Trimingham beach on the Norfolk coast. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Rangers chairman Dave King said on Saturday that, in effect, Celtic had won two, and not six, Scottish titles in a row, because Rangers had been in the lower leagues for four seasons.
"We haven't spoken about that sort of thing. We're focused on the here and now," said Celtic's assistant manager.
"That's what we do."
Davies flew out from Glasgow to Austria on Monday with manager Brendan Rodgers and the Celtic squad to prepare for their Champions League second round qualifier against Linfield or San Marino's SP La Fiorita in the second week of July.
Celtic play BW Linz on Wednesday before taking on Rapid Vienna on Saturday, with warm-up games against Slavia Prague and Shamrock Rovers to follow before their opening European tie.
"We've had a year working with the players and we know them a lot better," said Davies of the treble-winning squad, who went through last season unbeaten domestically.
"This time last year when we came, we were just getting used to everyone and how things worked.
"We know everybody a little bit better, we've had a year working with the players and developing the areas that we wanted to when we first came in.
"We're in a good place and hopefully we can go away, re-focus again together and come back stronger."
On the comments made by the Rangers chairman, Davies added: "I've seen little bits that have been said but I take no interest in those sort of things.
"People can say whatever they want, it's up to them to think and say what they want. We know where we're at, the club is secure, the club is happy and we keep working."
Davies felt that Jonny Hayes had "settled in really well" since moving from Aberdeen, but would not comment in depth on a move for Hibernian midfielder John McGinn other than acknowledging he was a player he admired.
The Englishman said: "He's a good player but again it's not fair to speculate about players who belong to other clubs. He had a very good season and I'm aware of him being a good player but that's as far as that one would go.
"We have players for every position, so there's not one area that stands out as an alarming position that we need to fill, but of course, you're looking at quality players."
11 August 2016 Last updated at 15:22 BST
The 17-year-old is one of the youngest members of Team GB out in Rio.
Her three younger sisters, Lisa, Emily and Sophie, are supporting her from back home in the UK.
All three of them are interested in weightlifting too.
Lisa tells Newsround: "In our house it's really competitive - you can be having your breakfast and we're just trying to fit each other up!"
Rebekah finished 10th in the women's 69kg event on Wednesday.
Watch her sisters speaking to Newsround ahead of the competition. | Chris Davies insists Celtic are focusing only on how they can improve and will not be distracted by comments about the value of their title wins.
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The sisters of weightlifter Rebekah Tiler have been telling Newsround what life is like with an Olympic athlete in your family. |
Please summarize the passage below. | Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke as the EU is poised to consider more sanctions on Russia.
Russia has denied claims by Nato that its forces illegally crossed into Ukraine to support separatists there.
Some 2,600 people have died in fighting between rebels and Ukrainian troops.
The conflict in Ukraine's eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk erupted in April following Russia's annexation of Ukraine's southern Crimea peninsula a month before.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has blamed Ukraine for the crisis, comparing its siege of the rebel-held cities of Donetsk and Luhansk to the siege of Leningrad by Nazi Germany in World War Two.
On Friday, Mr Steinmeier warned that the "already dangerous situation" in Ukraine had now entered "a whole new dimension".
"Our hopes that direct talks between [Ukraine and Russia] would contribute to de-escalating the situation have been disappointed," he said in Milan.
"The border infringements have intensified, and raised concerns that the situation is slipping out of control.
"This needs to stop, especially if we want to avoid direct military confrontation between Ukrainian and Russian military forces."
His sentiments were echoed by other foreign ministers:
Russia could face new restrictions after a summit of the European Union's 28 heads of state in Brussels on Saturday.
The EU and the US have already imposed sanctions against dozens of senior Russian officials, separatist commanders and Russian firms accused of undermining Ukrainian sovereignty.
In late July, the EU also blacklisted some key economic sectors, prompting Russia to retaliate by banning food imports.
Russia's energy minister has warned that the Ukrainian crisis could lead to a disruption of gas supplies to European countries this winter.
Earlier on Friday, Nato held an emergency meeting after releasing satellite images it said showed columns of Russian armed forces inside Ukrainian territory.
Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen called on Russia to "take immediate and verifiable steps towards de-escalation".
Mr Rasmussen also indicated Nato could consider Ukraine's application to join the alliance, shortly after Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk announced he was putting Ukraine on course for Nato membership.
Meanwhile, heavy fighting has continued near the strategic port of Mariupol on the Azov Sea. Rebel forces are trying to capture the city but Ukrainian government troops are digging in.
On Thursday the separatists seized the nearby town of Novoazovsk.
The separatists' advance toward Mariupol has raised fears that the Kremlin might seek to create a land corridor between Russia and Crimea.
Rebels are also reported to have surrounded government soldiers in several places further north, near Donetsk city.
A new UN report found that serious human rights abuses had been committed by rebels and Ukrainian forces.
The abuses include the deliberate targeting and killing of civilians trapped in urban areas or trying to flee the fighting via government-established "safe corridors", the study found.
It said that an average of around 36 people had been killed on a daily basis between 16 July and 17 August. | The crisis in eastern Ukraine is "slipping out of control" and needs to be reined in to avoid direct military confrontation between Ukraine and Russia, Germany has warned. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Christine Proctor noticed her six-year-old Labrador was behaving oddly after a walk in Ecton Brook playing fields in Northampton on Sunday.
Major was taken to an out-of-hours vet who confirmed the dog had eaten the drug and put him on a drip.
Mrs Proctor, 57, who has had to pay £350 in vet fees, said: "He is getting better but he is still dazed."
She added: "Initially he was was so frightened, he was hiding in the corner, then he was sensitive to touch and he couldn't control his bladder.
"It was horrible to see him like that."
Mrs Proctor, who is disabled and lives in sheltered housing, had to borrow the money to pay for Major's medical care.
She said: "He has had £350 of treatments and he will have to have more tests to make sure he is rid of it - I would warn any dog owner to be careful."
If Major had been a smaller dog the drugs could have killed him.
Vet Anna Holden, of Swanspool Veterinary Practice in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire said that dog owners should be vigilant.
"Dogs are very sensitive to drugs it can affect them very badly - in some cases it can lead to death.
"With cannabis dogs get hyper, they become very weak then they go into a coma state, it is traumatic for them."
The local authority previously gave £40,000 to the Hawick Sports Initiative (HSI) to maintain a sports pitch at the town's Volunteer Park.
HSI is now being wound up as it has decided it no longer needs to exist.
Agreement has been reached to give the funding to charitable trust Live Borders to improve park facilities.
Ewan Jackson, chief executive of Live Borders, said: "One of our priorities at Live Borders is to ensure that sports facilities in the region are of a high standard and widely available to all.
"We are delighted to be involved with the Volunteer Park project, it is a great example of how working together with local clubs and organisations can benefit the community as a whole."
David Davidson, who chairs HSI, added: "I am delighted that Hawick Sports Initiative has been able to deliver sports facilities at the Volunteer Park and through this agreement has ensured that any unused capital can be passed on for the next phase of maintaining the 2G pitch and to upgrade the changing facilities at our new 3G pitch. "
He said all of HSI's funding would stay in the town to support future development. | A dog had to be taken to an emergency vet after swallowing cannabis while walking in Northamptonshire.
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Scottish Borders Council has said funding for facilities in a Hawick park is safe despite a local sports initiative being wound up. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The city received the funding for its Nextbike scheme from Sustrans Scotland, which encourages cycling travel.
The 11 new stations were officially launched by Minister for Transport and the Islands, Humza Yousaf at Stirling's Albert Halls.
The scheme's expansion has increased the number of bikes available to rent in Stirling from 100 to 160.
The investment was secured by local charity Forth Environment Link.
The charity's director, Clara Walker said: "Since its initial launch the scheme has been hugely popular.
"We've recorded over 13,000 journeys and usage is growing by 40% year on year."
Bridge of Allan railway station and Castleview park & ride are among the new locations included in the scheme, which has been running in Stirling since 2014.
Stirling Provost Mike Robbins said: "Cycling is one of the best ways to see and get round our beautiful city.
"Doubling the number of Nextbike stations in and around the city at key locations such Teith House and The Peak will make it easier for our staff to use bikes to get to and from meetings.
"New bike stations at the park and ride sites will also open up the opportunity for staff to park their cars there and cycle into the city for work." | The number of bicycle rental stations in Stirling has doubled following a £150,000 investment. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The consultant, who does not wish to be named, stepped down following the revelation that an entire chapter of the final report had been removed.
It follows the resignation of two patient representatives who claimed the report had been watered down.
Health Secretary Shona Robison said no evidence would be hidden.
Transvaginal mesh implants are medical devices used by surgeons to treat pelvic organ prolapse and incontinence in women, conditions that can commonly occur after childbirth.
What's the issue with mesh implants?
Over the past 20 years, more than 20,000 women in Scotland have had mesh or tape implants but some have suffered painful and debilitating complications.
There are more than 400 women currently taking legal action against Scottish health boards and manufacturers as a result of mesh implant surgery.
In 2014 former health secretary Alex Neil called for the suspension of such procedures, and an independent review group was set up to look at safety issues.
An interim report published in October 2015 did not advocate a blanket ban on mesh implants but noted that some women do experience serious complications and it made suggestions for reducing the risks. The final report is expected shortly.
Earlier this month, the BBC revealed that an expert member of the review group had written to its chairwoman, raising concerns about the final draft.
The letter states that an entire chapter, which highlighted concerns about the use of mesh in some procedures and contained tables displaying the risks of treatment, had been taken out.
Patients representatives Olive McIlroy and Elaine Holmes, who have both suffered complications as a result of such surgery, resigned from the review earlier this month, claiming that the final report now lacked integrity and independence.
Responding to the latest resignation, Health Secretary Shona Robison said clinical experts sometimes disagreed on complex medical matters.
She said: "I want to reassure the Scottish Mesh Survivors Group their views have been heard, and I want them to remain at the centre of the crucial work.
"I have been clear that all evidence must be made publically available alongside the report once published. The chair of the Review Group has stressed to me the evidence has been fully considered by the review and none has been hidden.
"This is a complex, technical area and on occasions professionals will disagree. I am aware of the resignation of a clinical member from the group and, while this is unfortunate, their views and contribution to the review is much-appreciated and have proven valuable."
Ms Robision is due to meet Olive McIlroy and Elaine Holmes later this week to discuss their concerns.
In December, the BBC revealed that hundreds of mesh implant operations had been performed in Scotland despite ministers recommending their suspension.
Figures obtained by the BBC revealed that 404 women had received mesh and tape implants since the health secretary called for the suspension in June 2014.
The shares fell 9%, the steepest fall since it floated in London last year.
First-half sales for stores open at least a year rose 1.8%, led by specialist pet food sales and grooming.
"Trading in parts of the business has been weaker than expected," chief executive Nick Wood said. "Our full year profit outlook is broadly in line with market expectations."
Another difficult area was "continuing seasonal challenge to health & hygiene products".
Analysts at broker Liberum called the results "disappointing".
Total sales rose 6% to £404.5m, the company said in a statement.
In a year's time, the firm will have 408 stores, up from 385.
The fastest-growing part of the business is the services business where revenues rose 26.2% to £41.9m.
Fee income from joint venture veterinary practices rose 20.7% to £18.4m and the firm saw a "good performance" from NorthWest Surgeons, its specialist referral hospital.
It said 300,000 members joined its loyalty club during the quarter, taking membership to 3.9 million. | An expert at the centre of the independent review group looking at the safety of mesh implants in Scotland has resigned.
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Shares in pet superstore Pets at Home fell after the company said some sales figures were "weaker" than expected. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Media playback is unsupported on your device
21 July 2015 Last updated at 16:46 BST
The contraption - which uses nitrous oxide to "burn" the buns - was built to mark the start of the new Cosmic exhibition at the Cambridge Science Centre.
Revellers lined the River Cam near Darwin College and cheered as Jon London guided the boat through the water.
The 49-year-old from Douglas has been charged with possession of a Class B drug with intent to supply and is due to appear in court later.
A 35-year-old woman was arrested following a raid at a property in Hillside Avenue on Wednesday.
A 16-year-old boy was also held after cannabis was found when police stopped a car on the outskirts of Douglas.
Police seized a "significant amount" of the drug when the vehicle was stopped.
Sgt Karl Breadner said a "quantity of cash" was also recovered during the raids.
The woman and the boy have been released on police bail pending further inquiries.
Gwynedd council's cabinet heard on Tuesday that almost £5m worth of savings need to be found.
Lloyd George Museum in Llanystumdwy could be closed as part of the cuts.
Council leader Dyfed Edwards said he had received letters from "John O'Groats to Land's End" opposing cutbacks, which have been deferred until April 2017.
Mr Edwards emphasised that the council could not continue to run the museum in the long term.
A decision to halve strategic grants to arts organisation was also deferred until next April. | A rocket-powered punt fuelled by Chelsea buns has made its maiden voyage in Cambridge.
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A man has been charged after cannabis with a street value of £20,000 was seized in two raids on the Isle of Man.
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A decision on controversial plans to cut funding to the arts in Gwynedd and close a museum has been deferred. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Officers believe the children took the drug after it was mixed in a bottle of soft drink.
Greater Manchester Police said a man and a woman have been arrested on suspicion of being in possession of a controlled substance.
They are being held in custody for questioning.
It is thought the girls are among the youngest people in the UK to have fallen ill after taking the drug.
Officers were called to Salford Precinct on Saturday night amid reports a girl was overdosing and later found her two friends.
The force is investigating how they got hold of the tablets.
Last month, a 17-year-old girl died in Greater Manchester after suffering an adverse reaction to ecstasy. Two people arrested in connection with her death are on bail.
Police were called by North West Ambulance Service at about 22:00 BST while paramedics treated one of the girls, who they suspected of having overdosed.
They found one of the girls at the precinct, one in Belvedere Road, Salford, and the third girl was found about an hour later in Trafford Road. The girl at the precinct told police about her two friends.
Det Ch Insp Chris Walker said he hopes they will make "a full recovery".
"Sadly, three more young people, who are only 12-years-old, have taken ecstasy and ended up in hospital," he said.
"I am really concerned that children are now coming into contact with controlled drugs and they are now taking them on the streets of Salford."
He added: "It is imperative young people understand the implications and avoid taking drugs, to stop any more young people ending up in hospital."
The detective said three other young people had needed hospital treatment in recent months after taking a variation of ecstasy. | Three 12-year-old girls rushed to hospital after taking "Teddy" ecstasy tablets in Salford are now in a stable condition. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | Kurdish forces, known as YPG confirmed that Nazzareno Tassone, 24, was killed alongside Briton Ryan Lock, 20, in December.
In a letter to Tassone's family, the YPG said their bodies had been taken by IS.
Tassone left Canada for Turkey last June to fight with the Kurdish forces.
His uncle, Frank Tassone, and his sister, Giustina Tassone described him respectively as someone who was "goofy" and a "giant goofball" as a child who grew up to take a keen interest in the military and international affairs.
Ms Tassone said her brother had a strong sense of right and wrong, which is what led him to volunteer with the Kurdish fighters.
"He believed every human deserved decency and common rights," she said.
Her brother, who lived in Edmonton, told the family he was travelling to Turkey to teach English.
Although his family had their suspicions over the past six months, he kept his involvement with Kurdish forces a secret.
While she wishes he had been open with what he had chosen to do, she knew he did not want his family to worry.
"We worried anyway," she said.
The family has started a Facebook page to urge the federal government to help bring Tassone's remains back to Canada, and have reached out to Global Affairs Canada and their local member of Parliament.
"I want my nephew home so we can bury him," his uncle said. "I don't understand why they would take his body."
In a letter to Tassone's family dated 23 December, the YPG say that he died along with Lock and three other fighters in an offensive against IS on 21 December in Jaeber village in the battle for the Syrian city of Raqqa, and that the bodies were taken by IS.
The YPG offered condolences to his family, saying that he "crossed continents for the destiny of our people and humanity".
Canadian officials say they have contacted the family and that consular officials are in touch with local authorities to gather more information about the circumstances.
A spokeswoman for the federal government said consular efforts are limited by the civil war in Syria but that there were ongoing attempts to assist the family.
Lock's family is also asking for help from the YPG and the UK government to help repatriate his remains.
Tassone is the second Canadian volunteer fighter to die in Syria.
In 2015, Ontario native John Gallagher, 32, was killed in Syria while volunteering with the YPG. | The family of a Canadian man killed fighting the so-called Islamic State in Syria is urging the federal government to help repatriate his remains. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The accident happened when a cargo ship crashed into a fish farm on the Horsens Fjord on the Jutland peninsula.
There are fears that the fish, weighing about 3kg (6lb 10oz) each, could upset the ecological balance by eating the eggs of other trout species.
A local environmentalist urged "anyone with fishing gear to... go fishing".
Soren Knabe, chair of the environmental group Vandpleje Fyn and a member of the Danish Angler's Association, told the Copenhagen Post that it was the worst possible time for rainbow trout to be released into Danish waters.
"Sea trout are currently coming up into Funen streams to spawn, and sea trout eggs are a favourite food for rainbow trout," said Mr Knabe, referring to Funen island, south of the farm.
"The escaped rainbow trout will follow right behind the tails of the sea trout and eat their eggs."
The ecological threat posed by the fish was confirmed by Jon Svendsen, a researcher at Denmark's National Institute of Aquatic Resources, who spoke to Reuters news agency.
However, an angler who spoke to the agency said it would take four or five days for the escaped fish to adjust to their new environment and begin to bite.
The cargo vessel was en route from the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, to the east, to the Danish port of Kolding when it crashed on Tuesday. | Up to 80,000 farmed rainbow trout have been accidentally released into the sea in Denmark, prompting a call for anglers to try to catch them. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | A Premier League collision between two of Europe's A-list coaches ended in a 2-1 win for Klopp's Liverpool that was far more comfortable and convincing than the Stamford Bridge scoreline suggests.
Conte, in contrast, suffered his first loss since taking over at Chelsea to complete an indifferent week after they had to battle to get a point at Swansea City last Sunday.
So what are the early lessons for Klopp and Conte as Liverpool's season continues to gather pace and Chelsea's suffers a setback?
Klopp made his intentions clear with a bold claim when Liverpool opened their new Main Stand at Anfield recently.
"We want to go to the best teams in the world and give them hell," said Klopp as his managerial mission statement - and he has made good on his promise on the domestic front at least.
Liverpool's three trips to London this season have yielded seven points from this win at Chelsea, with a 4-3 victory at Arsenal and a 1-1 draw at Tottenham that should have brought the maximum return.
While it may be stretching the point to call this a hellish experience for Chelsea, it was certainly uncomfortable from first to last on a night when much of the early-season optimism around the new Conte regime was suddenly tempered by a heavy dose of realism.
Liverpool's win should have come as no surprise given the manner in which they have performed against the teams that are widely accepted as the Premier League's most powerful since Klopp was appointed manager.
In 14 games against Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United, Manchester City and Spurs since arriving at Liverpool almost a year ago, Klopp has lost only twice. He suffered a 1-0 home defeat by Manchester United in January and lost the League Cup final on penalties to Manchester City at Wembley in February.
The sequence has included a 3-1 win at Stamford Bridge and a 4-1 triumph at Manchester City last season - as well as victory over two legs against Manchester United in the Europa League, which included a 2-0 win at Anfield and a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford.
The only flaw in Klopp's masterplan is when Liverpool throw in the sort of dismal performance that saw them deservedly lose 2-0 at Burnley this season.
This latest win at Chelsea was Klopp and Liverpool putting down another marker that they are more than capable of competing with the best - and if they can put things right against the rest then their growing momentum will become even more ominous.
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The meeting between Conte and Klopp did not just carry heavy Premier League significance - it was a game where eyes were trained on the technical area as well as on the pitch.
Conte and Klopp are two of the game's most charismatic and animated managers, so it was always going to be an eventful evening for fourth official Bobby Madley.
Madley crossed swords with both, delivering an early warning to Conte for straying outside his designated area as well as being in regular conversation with Klopp.
Italian Conte prowled his technical area throughout, dark-suited and with shiny back shoes glinting in the floodlights. Klopp opted for a black Liverpool tracksuit.
In what might have been a sign of how the early phases were developing, Conte was all agitated, nervous action, while it took Klopp until the 13th minute to even leave his seat - and that was only to offer up a minor tweak at a Liverpool corner.
The real Klopp was unleashed when Jordan Henderson's magnificent 25-yard strike curved and dipped beyond Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois after 36 minutes.
Klopp leapt from his dugout with the exclamation "boom" as the shot flew in and Liverpool took control. It was a control they never seriously threatened to relinquish.
The goal may even be part of Klopp's wider plan because, since he took charge, Liverpool have scored 15 Premier League goals from outside the box, five more than any other side in that time.
The German was, however, furious at the manner in which his defenders, Joel Matip in particular, went to ground far too easily and allowed Nemanja Matic to set up Diego Costa's goal that gave Chelsea brief, albeit unfulfilled, second-half hope.
There was an air of increasing desperation about Conte, including one impromptu "Riverdance" jump on the spot when a decision went against Chelsea.
In the end he was as subdued as his Chelsea side and at the final whistle it was Klopp who embraced his Liverpool backroom staff before going around all of his players, back-slapping, bear-hugging and chest-beating before pumping his fists in the direction of their fans.
On this night, Klopp overcame Conte on all levels.
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Klopp's tried and trusted "gegenpressing" style and the pace provided by the likes of Daniel Sturridge and new £34m forward Sadio Mane appeared to leave Chelsea overcome with caution from the kick-off.
Conte's side, missing the influence and direction of injured captain John Terry, simply sat too deep and did too little, especially in the first half. It was an invitation to assume superiority that Liverpool, tactically progressive and proactive under Klopp, were never going to pass up.
Liverpool looked mobile, competitive, quick and fluent. Conte's Chelsea were laboured and lacking guile, with Matic and Branislav Ivanovic in particular looking like two players close to outliving their usefulness at Stamford Bridge.
The important Roberto Firmino was out with a groin injury but Klopp utilised a front three of Sturridge, Mane and Philippe Coutinho in a manner that compensated for the Brazilian's absence.
David Luiz looked exactly the same player that left Stamford Bridge for Paris St-Germain two years ago, although blame for this defeat could certainly not be apportioned to him.
Klopp's substitutions were more structured and logical than Conte's. Divock Origi came on to replace Sturridge just before the hour as the striker appeared to pick up a knock, while the tiring Coutinho was replaced with the more defensive-minded Lucas to lock down the 2-1 result with eight minutes left.
Conte, surprisingly, waited to make changes even after Costa, who spent the night isolated and toiling alone, pulled one back after 61 minutes. Chelsea failed to cash in on that rare moment of supremacy.
In the end, it was the 83rd minute before Conte made a change, with the odd voice in the stands having demanded them earlier - and then he made all three at once.
Cesc Fabregas was belatedly introduced for Matic, while Victor Moses and Pedro replaced Willian and Oscar. The big surprise was that £33m summer signing Michy Batshuayi remained unused as Chelsea chased a goal.
Conte has not made a substitution in the Premier League before the 71st minute this season - Moses at Watford - so he is clearly not a natural exponent of the early change.
In Conte's defence, though, his substitutions have generally been positive and helped get late wins against West Ham and particularly at Watford, where Batshuayi scored an equaliser and fellow sub Fabregas set up Costa's winner.
Here, though, Klopp's Liverpool were more organised and seemed more tactically aware of what their gameplan was.
As Liverpool's team coach pulled out of west London and headed back to Merseyside before midnight, it would have been accompanied by a growing sense of confidence, even excitement, about their prospects this season.
The loss at Burnley will act as the check on over-optimism, but Liverpool and Klopp can take great encouragement from Friday's win, as well as those performances at Arsenal and Spurs and the 4-1 dismissal of champions Leicester City at Anfield.
Matip, with the same languid gait and build of the young Rio Ferdinand, has started solidly in central defence and was given few problems by the poorly served Costa, while Dejan Lovren grows in stature alongside the free transfer from German side Schalke.
Klopp's big summer buys have also settled well. Georginio Wijnaldum was a solid, steady presence and the pace, verve and tireless running of Mane gives Liverpool the sort of defending from the front and menace they have lacked since the departure of Luis Suarez - although it should be stressed this is not to compare the two in terms of quality.
Liverpool's players clearly have faith in Klopp and the bond was shown by the warmth of the embraces between team and manager at the final whistle.
This has been - Burnley apart - a highly impressive start by Liverpool. It is too early to talk in title terms but they have no reason not to already set their sights on a place in the top four.
As Klopp also said when that imposing new stand was opened: "If there is one part of life where you can challenge the best in the world then it's football. It depends on your attitude.
"If always the people with the best circumstances would win, this world would be an ugly place. We all have the chance to fight for everything. It's not about having a guarantee; it's about having the opportunity."
Arsenal, Spurs and Chelsea will do the same. So why not Liverpool after emerging unscathed, and with seven points, from those three trips to the capital? | Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp was bear-hugging and chest-bumping his triumphant players as Chelsea counterpart Antonio Conte was back in the dressing room contemplating a defeat about which he could have no complaints. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Ram Kaji Awale was at his brick factory when the 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Kathmandu on 25 April, 2015.
The 20-metre-high chimney of the brick kiln came down and the oven was completely destroyed.
"We managed to save all but one worker from the oven on that day," Mr Awale says.
More than 9,000 people died because of the quake that hit central Nepal and many old buildings were destroyed in Kathmandu, including nearly all of the brick kilns in the valley.
After the disaster, Mr Awale decided to rebuild his brick kiln with improved technology.
Traditional brick kilns run using old-style technology, with limited air passages in the oven.
That means coal is not burnt efficiently, so that large amounts of soot and other polluting particles are emitted from the chimney.
The new oven now has several air passages with fans installed in them so that there is plenty of air to burn the coal efficiently, creating significantly less polluting smoke.
"The new technology has not only stopped sending out thick black smoke," says Mr Awale, pointing at the stack, which now billows whitish smoke. "It has also increased our brick production by 25%."
Experts say the new design, known as zigzag technology, has been able to bring down pollution from the new brick kilns by around 60%.
"When this brick kiln ran with the old technology, it emitted more than 700 micrograms per cubic metres of particulate matter and now it is around 200," says Bidhya Pradhan, an atmospheric scientist with the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), which helps brick kiln operators to switch over to cleaner technology.
"And if they are really good at it, they can also increase their energy efficiency by 50%."
A week of coverage by BBC News looking at ways to cut air pollution.
Mr Awale says that more than the energy efficiency, it was the health factor that motivated him to make the change.
"Of course, it requires huge investment - almost double to what the previous technology required - but I was prepared for it because it is for my own and others' health," he says proudly.
"Everyone is happy about what I have done, our neighbours are also very happy about it."
His neighbours certainly seem happy.
"Before when we worked on our land like this, our hands were covered by black particles, same was the case with our feet when we went to our roof tops to dry clothes in the sun," says Ram Shova Bhandari, collecting vegetables from her kitchen garden just a hundred metres from the brick kiln.
"Now we have no such problem, the number of people suffering from coughs and other respiratory diseases too has gone down."
Workers in Mr Awale's brick kiln confirm that there are less soot particles coming out of the chimney but they say other issues remain.
"For us, more than the smoke from the chimney, it is the dust from bricks that causes problems because we inhale it while collecting the bricks and that problem has not changed," one worker in the factory says.
Despite cleaner air for residents around these factories, Kathmandu still remains one of the most polluted cities in the world. So far, only around 10 brick kilns in Kathmandu have adopted the new technology. That leaves around 90 brick kilns in Kathmandu valley that still use the old-style design.
"The challenge is not just to bring the change in them," says Ms Pradhan of ICIMOD, pointing at another brick kiln chimney billowing thick black smoke a couple of hundred metres away.
"There are also more than 800 brick kilns outside Kathmandu that still run with the old method. We need to roll out this new technology there as well."
The technology exists to make a difference. The question is whether the other brick kiln owners will be convinced to update their kilns.
While there are other significant sources of pollution in Kathmandu Valley, from vehicles to farm fires, there is a lot of construction still to be done in Kathmandu and nearby areas following the earthquake, so newer brick kilns could help build a cleaner future for the region. | Hundreds of coal-burning brick kilns are a major source of pollution in Nepal - but after a devastating earthquake two years ago, some are being rebuilt with new technology which promises a cleaner future. |
Please summarize the given passage. | In a video message posted on Twitter, Kathy Griffin "begged" for forgiveness and said she had "crossed a line".
She said she was asking celebrity photographer Tyler Shields to remove the photo from the internet.
The gruesome image brought a storm of online criticism, including from Mr Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr.
"Disgusting but not surprising," he tweeted. "This is the left today. They consider this acceptable."
Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of Mr Trump's 2016 election rival Hillary, also condemned the image, calling it "vile and wrong".
"It is never funny to joke about killing a president," she tweeted.
Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney also waded in, tweeting: "Our politics have become too base, too low, & too vulgar, but Kathy Griffin's post descends into an even more repugnant & vile territory."
The 56-year-old Emmy award-winning actress and comedian has been a staunch critic of President Trump.
In her video apology, she said: "I'm just now seeing the reaction of these images. I'm a comic, I crossed the line. I moved the line and then I crossed it. I went way too far.
"The image is too disturbing. I understand how it affects people. It wasn't funny, I get it. I beg for your forgiveness."
Nesta Thomas, from Caernarfon, fell and hit a metal barrier as she left her local Morrisons on 11 February 2016, the hearing in Caernarfon was told.
She refused an ambulance but died eight days later after it was found she had fractured a vertebrae in her spine.
A pulmonary embolism due to deep vein thrombosis caused by the fracture was given as the cause of death.
A conclusion of accidental death was recorded and Morrisons, who was not represented at the case, has since installed sliding doors.
Mrs Thomas' daughter Christine told the hearing the door gave her "a heck of a shove".
The day after the incident, Ms Thomas was taken to Ysbyty Gwynedd in Bangor complaining of back pain where it was discovered she had fractured a vertebrae in her spine.
However, she had been suffering a chest infection, which doctors thought was getting worse, so they decided to concentrate on treating that first.
Doctor Mark Lord, who conducted the post mortem examination, said he found no evidence of a chest infection.
But he did find fragments of a blood clot, which could have been mistaken for an infection.
He concluded she died of a pulmonary embolism due to deep vein thrombosis, caused by being immobile because of the fracture.
"If she hadn't been immobile, she would not have had the clots," he said.
Coroner Dewi Pritchard Jones recorded a conclusion of accidental death.
A Morrisons spokesman said: "We were sad to hear about the passing of Mrs Thomas and our sympathies are with her family."
Last week Chautala and 54 others were convicted of forging documents to hire 3,206 teachers between 1999 and 2000.
Prosecutors said well-qualified candidates were rejected in favour of those who offered bribes for jobs.
It is estimated that the scam was worth about 1.5bn rupees ($28m; £18m).
Chautala is the leader of the Indian National Lok Dal party and the son of former deputy prime minister Devi Lal.
His supporters and police clashed outside the court complex on Tuesday. Police used batons and fired teargas shells to control thousands of protesters who gathered there.
The scandal only came to light in 2008 when the federal Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) filed charges against Chautala and the others. | A US comedian has apologised for a photo shoot in which she appeared holding a fake bloodied head that resembled US President Donald Trump.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
An 87-year-old woman died after being knocked over by automatic doors at a supermarket, an inquest has heard.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The ex-chief minister of the Indian state of Haryana Om Prakash Chautala and his son Ajay, also a politician, have been sentenced to 10 years in jail for corruption. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | The match on Saturday, 22 April kicks off at 12:15 GMT and the TV coverage will also be streamed on the BBC Sport website.
The other semi-final between Celtic and Rangers, also at Hampden, kicks off at noon on Sunday, 23 April.
As well as live radio commentary, there will also be highlights on Sportscene on Sunday evening.
Aberdeen and Hibs reached the semi-final courtesy of wins over Partick Thistle and Ayr United, respectively, while Celtic saw off St Mirren and Rangers thrashed Hamilton Academical.
Saturday, 22 April
Aberdeen v Hibernian (12:15 GMT)
Sunday, 23 April
Celtic v Rangers (12:00 GMT)
Witnesses on social media said they heard what sounded like multiple "explosions" and saw billowing clouds of smoke coming from subway grates.
Toronto Fire Service confirmed that the fire began in an underground vault used to store electrical transformers.
Subway service was not affected, but police closed off the area near Bay Street and King Street.
Some buildings have also been evacuated because of the smoke.
"You don't want to be in the smoke," Toronto Fire Services platoon chief Kevin Shaw told media at a press conference.
A few minutes after the explosion, the blasts had died down but a BBC reporter on the scene said you could still here popping sounds "like popcorn" and smell acrid smoke in the air.
Mr Shaw said that the fire was "under control" and may have been triggered by damp weather.
No injuries are reported.
KBT has about 200MW of diesel and gas contracts on hire with Indonesian utility company PLN.
The deal will add to the 140MW that Aggreko already has contracted with PLN.
KBT has been serving the power rental market since 2010.
Aggreko chief executive Chris Weston said: "Aggreko has had a long and productive relationship with PLN and Indonesia, and this acquisition will deepen this further.
"PLN has been clear in its ambition to improve the power situation in East Indonesia in particular, and we will be well placed to support this with our extended presence and competitiveness."
The 26-year-old from Cornwall won the PTVI title in Austria to add to her bronze from the Rio Olympics last year.
"This year's about trying new things to see where we can improve, to try and stay on top of the podium," she said.
"I'd say I plateaued quite a bit over the past couple of years, but I've been lucky enough to stay on the podium."
Reid added to BBC Radio Cornwall: "Coming into the new season I had a really long break after Rio, and so I wasn't expecting too much of a performance for the first couple of races this year."
She hopes she has done enough to secure a place at the World Championships in Rotterdam in September, but may have to compete in Canada at the end of July to be sure of her spot.
"I had quite a long time of keeping my bike locked away and not playing on it at all, so this year is building up back to the same amount of hours as I was doing before Rio," Reid said.
Officers said the 63-year-old man from Skelmersdale suffered bruising and sore ribs after a "man collided with him" on Ormskirk Road on Thursday evening.
A 34-year-old man from Formby voluntarily attended a police station and was interviewed under caution.
Police inquiries into the incident remain ongoing.
In the mobile phone footage, which was posted on YouTube but has since been removed, a man is heard sniggering from behind the camera before the man falls to the ground.
Onlookers are then seen rushing to help the victim before calling for an ambulance.
Merseyside Police said: "The 63-year-old has declined to make any allegation or report of assault in relation to this incident." | BBC Scotland will show live coverage of the Scottish Cup semi-final between Aberdeen and Hibernian at Hampden.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
An underground electrical fire has caused a series of "explosions" in downtown Toronto.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Glasgow-based temporary power provider Aggreko has expanded its operations in Indonesia by acquiring power rental company KBT in a deal worth up to $32.8m (£25.7m).
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Melissa Reid says she is looking at ways of becoming faster after taking gold at the European Para-triathlon Championships earlier this month.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man who was pictured online being knocked over by an Aintree racegoer has declined to make a complaint to police. |
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