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During July, 1,332,282 passengers passed through the airport - a 9.6% increase on the same month last year. The head of Edinburgh Airport said that despite the growth, there was evidence the Brexit vote had damaged the aviation business. Chief executive Gordon Dewar also said it further highlighted the cause for a cut in Air Passenger Duty. Scottish ministers have said they will cut the duty by 50% between 2018 and 2021. While domestic passenger numbers at the airport actually fell 3.6% in 2016 compared with 2015, the airport saw an 18.5% increase on international passengers over the period. Mr Dewar said: "European airports' growth for the first half of the year is at 4.9%; our growth over same six-month period compared to the last year is more than double that. "Despite our encouraging growth, there is evidence of damage to the aviation business that has followed the Brexit vote - this further highlights the need to reduce Air Passenger Duty as soon as possible. "Cutting APD will be a strong demonstration of Scotland's international ambitions. It will send a powerful signal to the global airline market that Scotland is most definitely open for business, and would go some way to counter the negative business impact of the UK's plans to leave the EU." Glasgow Airport also saw its passenger numbers top the one million mark, with 1,018,433 boarding flights in July - a rise of 6.4% on a year ago. Its numbers are slowly returning to the 2006 highs seen before the financial crisis, when the annual figure topped 8.8 million passengers. However, Aberdeen International Airport saw its passenger numbers drop by nearly 16%, with 293,136 people using the airport in July. International and domestic traffic was down 8.4% and 18.7% respectively, with helicopter traffic also down 22.3%. Despite the drop and the North Sea oil downturn, airport bosses said they were pushing ahead with £20m plans to extend the existing terminal.
Edinburgh Airport has reported the highest number of passengers for a Scottish airport on record.
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The 44-year-old will play Plutarch Heavensbee, the architect of the bloodthirsty, televised games which give the series its title. Filming is due to start in September, with Jennifer Lawrence returning as heroine Katniss Everdeen. The first instalment has taken $678m (£437m) at the global box office. In the US, it is the second highest-grossing film of the year to date, behind superhero movie The Avengers. The series is based on a trilogy of teen novels by Suzanne Collins. The books are set in a future North America where civil war has led to the creation of a dozen "districts", controlled by an amoral, pampered elite. Every year, to assert their dominance, two dozen young citizens are subjected to a bloody fight to the death. Hoffman will play the head gamesmaker in Catching Fire and his character goes on to have a pivotal role in the third book. The actor won an Oscar for his portrayal of journalist Truman Capote in 2005 and recently received a Tony nomination for his role in a Broadway revival of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. Also returning for the second instalment are Josh Hutcherson, who plays Everdeen's ally Peeta, and Donald Sutherland, as President Snow. Directed by Francis Lawrence, the film is slated for release in November 2013. Central Madhya Pradesh state has suffered the highest death toll with at least 17 people killed in flood-related incidents, officials said. And in eastern Bihar state, at least 15,000 people have been evacuated from their homes after a "flood-like situation" in a dozen districts. Floods are common in India during the monsoon season between June and September. But excessive rains this year have caused the Ganges river and its tributaries to rise above the danger level in about 20 districts in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. At least 13 people have died in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh states because of drowning, electrocution or injuries sustained after house collapses. In Bihar, where at least six rivers are flowing above the danger mark, thousands of people have taken shelter in more than 80 relief camps, reports say. People have taken shelter on the roofs of their submerged huts, and houses along the banks of the river are inundated. "We are facing a lot of problems, everything has been submerged in river. There is no arrangement of food, drinking water or boats. We don't know what to do," a resident in Patna city told Reuters news agency. In the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh, the Ganges river has been flowing above the danger mark, and people living in low lying areas have been moving to higher ground. "Water has been gushing in the area for the last three days. All the land has been inundated with flood water. All the crops have been damaged. Water has started entering our houses," said a villager, Shyam. The World War Two planes will drop more than 200,000 poppies following a service at the Tank Museum in Bovington on Remembrance Sunday. The flowers will be cast from the vintage bi-planes as they fly past during the two-minute silence. The service at the museum will be open to members of the public. Former Fleet Air Arm pilot Kevin Crumplin, who owns and restores the planes, said it was unusual to see the three Tiger Moths flying in formation. "We would normally fly two together, or just one. "It will be the first time we do a poppy drop." Mr Crumplin said he was happy to organise the flypast, which had been at the request of the Army.
Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman has signed up for a role in Catching Fire, the sequel to hit action film The Hunger Games. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Floods across India have killed more than 30 people and displaced thousands. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Three Tiger Moth aircraft are to drop thousands of poppies from the skies above Dorset in memory of servicemen and women who died in the line of duty.
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Some 179 British soldiers, who were part of the coalition, died in Iraq. Mr Corbyn, who is tipped to be the next Labour leader, attended the event on behalf of the Stop the War Coalition. Mr Corbyn's team said the conference, in Cairo, had not been organised by Stop the War. But Panorama has discovered the conference communiqué was posted on Stop the War's website and remained on it for many years. The Cairo Conference was organised by an Egyptian anti-war organisation. Its 2003 conclusions committed the conference to support "resistance against the occupation forces with all legitimate means, including military struggle". At the time, Mr Corbyn was on Stop the War's steering committee. Panorama asked Mr Corbyn whether he had supported the right of Iraqis to attack British soldiers - in line with the conference statement. A spokesman for the Labour leadership candidate said: "Jeremy was opposed to the Iraq war and to the loss of 179 British soldiers. No lives should have been lost. "His opposition to war was precisely because he did not wish to put British troops in harm's way, and voted inside Parliament against the war and worked with Stop The War (StWC) outside to stop it happening. "As for the the Cairo conference, it was a separate organisation from StWC. Publication of its statement does not mean StWC endorsement of it. "Still less did it mean that all the diverse membership of StWC steering committee agreed with it or were asked to endorse it." Since he entered Labour's leadership race, Mr Corbyn's foreign policy views and activism have come under intense scrutiny. Last month, he insisted remarks made in 2009 about Hezbollah and Hamas being his "friends" had been taken out of context.
Jeremy Corbyn attended a conference after the Iraq war that called on Iraqis to engage in "military struggle" against coalition forces, the BBC's Panorama programme has learned.
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Devon and Cornwall Police confirmed they were undertaking excavation work at an address in Cullompton, Devon. David Williams was jailed for life in 2015 and his wife Pauline for 12 years for putting 10 girls and boys through rape, sexual assault and beatings. The couple became friends of the Wests in Gloucester in the 1980s. A police spokesman said: "Following intelligence received, Devon and Cornwall Police are undertaking excavation work at a property in Cullompton, Devon. "This relates to historic intelligence connected to the address and its former occupants. It is expected to take up to four days to complete. "Specialist officers will be involved in the excavation, which we hope will have as little impact on the local community as possible." Last year a court heard that David Williams had boasted of his connections with the Wests, who drank at the Prince Albert pub he ran in Gloucester. The Williams, who are both in their 50s, started abusing children in the late 1980s when they were running the pub. One victim was seven years old. They also ran the Victoria Inn in Exeter after moving to the city in the 1990s, where they went on to abuse a string of teenagers. At their trial, they denied a total of 46 charges of sexual and physical abuse between 1989 and 2004. David Williams was found guilty of 10 rapes, 13 indecent assaults, five counts of gross indecency, two of cruelty and one of sexual activity with a child. His wife was found guilty of two rapes and five indecent assaults. They were found not guilty of eight other allegations involving two other complainants. Fred West was awaiting trial on 12 murder charges when he hanged himself in prison in January 1995. Rose West was convicted of 10 murders in November 1995 and is serving life. The charges related to the deaths of young women over a 20-year period.
The garden at the former home of a paedophile couple, who knew serial killers Fred and Rose West, is being dug up by police based on a tip-off.
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The US territory's governor warned on Sunday the island's financial crisis meant it could not meet the deadline. Puerto Rico has $70bn of debts. With further, larger loan repayments due in coming months Alejandro Garcia Padilla asked for more time for talks. Creditors have agreed to 30 days of talks and hold off from legal action. Mr Garcia Padilla said Puerto Rico's Government Development Bank (GDB) and major creditors had agreed a framework for restructuring some of the debt. He described it as a "vital first step". However, the territory owes another $1.9bn in July. Any restructuring must be approved by the US Congress, which has been accused of dragging its feet to help Puerto Rico. As a US territory, Puerto Rico cannot file for bankruptcy protection. It has been pleading for Washington to offer it a lifeline. How did Puerto Rico get into such a mess? Lew pushes for Puerto Rico debt deal Mr Garcia Padilla, who inherited the crisis when he took office in January 2013, blamed lobbying by "vulture" hedge funds and what he called "racist" attitudes towards Puerto Rico. "Our worst enemy at the moment is politics," he said. White House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Monday that he hoped the latest developments would push Congress to act. The creditors who have agreed a 30-day extension of talks hold about $935m of GDB's $4bn in bonds. The creditors call themselves the Ad Hoc Group. They are thought to have been due about $120m of the total $422m that should have been repaid to creditors on Monday. Puerto Rico could still face legal action from creditors who are not part of Ad Hoc. In a televised speech on Sunday evening, Mr Garcia Padilla said the decision to default had been "painful" and that legal action would make a desperate situation worse. The Ad Hoc Group includes hedge funds Avenue Capital Management, Brigade Capital Management, Claren Road Asset Management, Fir Tree Partners, Fore Research & Management and Solus Alternative Asset Management. Karanka, 42, was absent from Sunday's trip to Charlton as he considered his future following a row, leaving assistant Steve Agnew to take charge. "I had a meeting today with the players and the staff because we have to be together," he told the club's website. "It's the only way we can achieve our aim [of promotion]. I couldn't put the crowd in the room as it was too small." The former Real Madrid player and coach added: "I think the club and me had everything clear. The club never thought to sack me and I never wanted to leave." Boro were beaten 2-0 at The Valley, the second time they had lost to opposition in the Championship relegation places in the space of six days. The former centre-half resumed his duties on Monday with the team still second in the table with 10 games remaining. "I think the passion the people have supporting this club is amazing," the Spaniard added. "Now I am much stronger because they gave me that energy. I would like to get promotion and it is now in our hands, especially after what happened on Sunday. "I always said the crowd is behind me at this club and if I am proud of something it is because when we came here two years ago we had 10,000 to 12,000 at the stadium and now we have at least 22,000." Boro were six points clear at the top of the Championship on 12 January but are now seven points behind leaders Burnley.
Puerto Rico has defaulted on a $422m (£289m) debt payment due on Monday, but won breathing space from some major creditors for further talks. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Middlesbrough head coach Aitor Karanka says he "never wanted to leave" the club despite missing their last game.
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Media playback is not supported on this device The outcome is unclear but the decision rests solely with Wenger and Kroenke and will be relayed to directors at a Tuesday board meeting. Fresh terms were agreed in principle months ago, but nothing has been signed to extend Wenger's 21-year tenure. Arsenal are planning to make an announcement on Wednesday. Although Wenger, 67, also met chief executive Ivan Gazidis on Monday, the time he spent with Kroenke would have been decisive. The businessman has privately reiterated his support for the manager and his commitment to providing him with the resources he needs to win the Premier League title. Wenger is acutely aware of the disruption his departure could cause, which is one of the reasons why it is most likely he will extend his reign. However, it is not definitive. Arsenal are planning to make a statement and release an interview with Wenger on Wednesday, when further internal changes are expected to be outlined. Those will not be drastic nor impinge on the manager's control over the technical side of the club. There is no prospect of a director of football being appointed, though a lower-profile role to enhance Arsenal's work in areas such as scouting and contracts is under consideration. Transfer and contract negotiator Dick Law, whose own deal expires in September, will keep his job for the time being. Wenger's preference has always been to stay, but the determining factor was how he believed the atmosphere around the club would be affected by him doing so. He has faced unprecedented criticism during a season in which the Gunners finished outside the Premier League's top four for the first time in his reign. However, they beat Chelsea on Saturday to win the FA Cup, making Wenger the most successful manager - and Arsenal the most successful team - in the competition's history. Although Kroenke has never wavered in his desire for Wenger to remain in charge, certain board members feel the time has come for the Frenchman to leave. However, all power lies with the American, so Wenger's main concern is external opposition and the conditions that might create for his players next season. He has admitted the uncertainty over his position did not help performances or the mood around the club, and that it should have been resolved sooner. Arsenal lost seven of 12 matches between 31 January and 10 April, including a 10-2 aggregate defeat by Bayern Munich in the Champions League last 16. They responded by winning nine of their last 10 games, but a fifth-place finish in the league ended their run of 19 consecutive years in the Champions League and means they will instead contest the Europa League next season.
Manager Arsene Wenger held a meeting with Arsenal owner Stan Kroenke on Monday, at which the Frenchman's future was expected to be decided.
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The 47-year-old was part of the Sports Shield consortium which took control of the Trotters in March and had acted as the League One side's chief executive. Holdsworth was moved to the position of director of football on 28 June. The former striker, who spent six years at Bolton between 1997 and 2003, will remain as a shareholder at the club. The 23-year-old Liverpudlian secured the title in the +73kg category with victory over France's Gwladys Epangue, 31, in Chelyabinsk, Russia. Last year, Walkden won +73kg gold in the European Championships in Baku but this is her first medal at world level. "I'm the new heavyweight champion of the world and honestly, I'm so happy," she said. "It's unbelievable." Sarah Stevenson won world titles for Britain at middleweight in 2001 and at welterweight in 2011. Walkden, who trains in Manchester, is nicknamed "Queen B" and is a housemate of London Olympic 2012 gold medallist Jade Jones. Jones was beaten by Kimia Zenoorin of Iran in the quarter-finals of the -57kg division in Russia on Sunday. New world champion Walkden has overcome two serious knee injuries in the last four years. "To have had my knee troubles and to come back like this, it is such an emotional win," she said. "It just shows it's all about your head and your heart as well." Carbon emissions from air-conditioning are expected to soar as temperatures climb and people become richer. But at a global mayors summit, Paris is showcasing a simple technology using water piped from the Seine to cool apartments near the Champs Elysees. London Mayor Boris Johnson said he wanted London to follow suit by cooling buildings using water from the Thames. "I don't like to admit it - but the French are ahead of us on this," he confessed. The system works by taking water from the river and piping it round people's homes like ordinary piped water air conditioning. In summer a heat pump is used to make the water even cooler by employing technology similar to a fridge. The mayors meeting in Paris City Hall is timed to coincide with the UN climate summit. It brings together half of the 80 mega-city mayors who are working together to tackle climate change. The chairman of the group, Eduardo Paes, Mayor of Rio, said the mayors represented 600m people and a quarter of the global economy. "We can be very effective," he said. "Sometimes governments move slowly - we can often move more quickly." The mayors said they had learned from each other to spread green solutions round the world. They claim to have collectively made 10,000 climate initiatives since 2009. They spoke about their favourite initiatives: Boris Johnson's team said since the Mayor was elected in 2008, carbon emissions in London were down by 14%, even though population had swelled. He said a major preoccupation was to find ways of finding a low-carbon way to provide the heating and cooling from natural gas, which made up nearly 50% of the city's emissions. Darren Johnson, Green member for the London Assembly, told BBC News: "On the whole Boris Johnson has been a real disappointment. He has expressed climate sceptic views and failed to meet most of the targets in his (climate) strategies." The global commission advised by Lord Stern concluded recently that climate change could only be tackled if new cities to house a burgeoning population could be planned less like Los Angeles and more like Paris. Climate change remedies 'affordable' Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin COP 21 - the 21st session of the Conference of the Parties - will see more than 190 nations gather in Paris to discuss a possible new global agreement on climate change, aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions to avoid the threat of dangerous warming due to human activities. Explained: What is climate change? In video: Why does the Paris conference matter? Analysis: Latest from BBC environment correspondent Matt McGrath More: BBC News climate change special report
Dean Holdsworth has left his position as Bolton Wanderers' director of football after less than a month in the role, the club have confirmed. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Bianca Walkden has become only the second Briton ever to win gold at the World Taekwondo Championships. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Cities could use water from rivers and the sea to stay cool as the climate heats, city mayors have been told.
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Media playback is not supported on this device Heatley raced on to a superb long ball by Billy Joe Burns and got past keeper Conor Devlin to score the winner. Burns was later sent-off for two yellow cards while Cliftonville substitute George McMullan got a red for comments made from the touchline. Crusaders remain seven points ahead of second-placed Linfield. Overall, referee Ross Dunlop issued two red cards and 11 yellow in what was a highly-competitive north Belfast derby. Cliftonville, League Cup winners last weekend, now find themselves 12 adrift of the leaders. They had a Johnny Flynn header ruled out for offside and also felt they should have been awarded a penalty for hand ball against Jordan Owens. However, the points went to Crusaders and the way their players celebrated on the pitch after the final whistle, illustrated just how import the victory was as they go for back-to-back titles. Cliftonville, champions in 2013 and 2014, really needed a victory to throw the title race wide open. But now, many will view the battle for the Premiership crown as a two-horse race between the holders and David Healy's Linfield. Crusaders scorer Paul Heatley: "In my opinion Cliftonville are out of it now, and I think most people will see it that way. "We have been beaten just two times this season and it shows how consistent we have been. "It is why we are 12 points ahead of Cliftonville of seven of Linfield with a game in hand." Cliftonville manager Gerard Lyttle: "The big decisions didn't go our way today and we seemed to get all the bookings. "It is not the first time we have come down here and the decisions have gone against us. "Declan Caddell made about nine fouls before he actually got booked while we make one foul and get booked for it."
Paul Heatley's goal after just three minutes proved enough to seal a vital win for Premiership leaders Crusaders against third-placed Cliftonville.
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The Nottinghamshire pace bowler, 25, is in the 12-man squad for the first Test of the three-game series against Sri Lanka, which starts on Thursday. "The day I got the news, it didn't quite sink in. I was sworn to secrecy," he told BBC Nottingham Sport. "That night I was in my flat thinking 'I know I will be in the squad' and I wanted to scream it from the rooftops." Ball was told in a face-to-face meeting with national selector James Whitaker while in the middle of a County Championship game against Middlesex at Lord's, and joins Notts team-mates Stuart Broad and Alex Hales in the squad. "I saw Stuart and Alex get their phone calls to say they were in and just after lunch Mick Newell [Notts director of cricket] said there was somebody who wants to speak to you. "I walked downstairs saw James and I was delighted to get the news," he said. "Obviously I was over the moon. I told mum and dad and brother, but I didn't get much sleep that night. "The next day, when I got all the messages on Facebook, Twitter and the text messages, was when it started to sink in. It was overwhelming." Ball took 39 wickets in 13 Championship appearances last season, but is joint leading wicket-taker with 19 from four games so far this summer. He met England coach Trevor Bayliss for the first time when the squad joined up for fitness tests. "I shook hands with him and he said he didn't recognise me," he added. "He said to keep doing what I have been doing. It's very surreal but I am trying to soak it all in and enjoy it." The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry's (IFPI) list, is based on physical sales, downloads and streaming stats - despite not having any music on Spotify. One Direction, who topped the list in 2013, slipped to second in 2014. The top three was completed by Ed Sheeran, who read this morning's weather forecast on the Radio 1 breakfast show. The list is dominated by Brits with Coldplay (4th), Pink Floyd (7th) and Sam Smith (8th) also in the top 10. One Direction, who have been the top UK act on the list for the last three years, were the only British act on the list last year. In November, Swift, 25, removed her entire back catalogue from music-streaming service Spotify saying: "I'm not willing to contribute my life's work to an experiment that I don't feel fairly compensates the writers, producers, artists and creators of this music." The 25-year-old said that she was still "open-minded about things" but said having her music on the streaming site "didn't feel right". Her fifth studio album 1989 went on to debut at number one in America's Billboard chart and became the singer's second UK number one. The album, which the singer said was predicated to sell 650,000 in its opening week, sold 1.29m copies in its first seven days. Those sales made her the only act to have three albums sell more than one million copies in their first week on sale. Swift, who will play at Radio 1's Big Weekend in Norwich later this year, is one of eight new entries in the IFPI's top 10 compared to last year's list. One Direction and Katy Perry, who has fallen four places from fifth to ninth, are the only artists to keep their place. The other names on the list - Michael Jackson (sixth), Katy Perry (ninth) and Beyonce (10th) - are all American except for Australian rock group AC/DC - who came fourth. The IFPI, which only includes musical acts on the list, said that the soundtrack to Disney's Frozen would have topped Swift. 1. Taylor Swift 2. One Direction 3. Ed Sheeran 4. Coldplay 5. AC/DC 6. Michael Jackson 7. Pink Floyd 8. Sam Smith 9. Katy Perry 10. Beyonce Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
Jake Ball wanted to shout about his "surreal" England call-up from the "rooftops" and keeping quiet was tough. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Taylor Swift has been named the world's most popular artist of last year.
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It may ultimately impact on other institutions such as the National Library of Wales and the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. But its creation is the result of a study, undertaken by PwC in March 2016 and published in the summer, to examine ways of maximising the potential commercial revenue of Cadw, the Welsh government body that looks after many of Wales' historic castles and monuments. The report made a number of recommendations, from loose collaboration to a complete merger of national heritage bodies such as the museum and library. A steering group, with representatives from the heritage sector as well as unions representing staff, is currently considering areas where greater collaboration could be achieved. There is widespread agreement that collaboration can enhance the sector, but it is the prospect of formally merging some activity that has made the proposal so controversial. Officially, the final form will be decided by the Welsh Government once the organisations and the unions have had their say. That is likely to be early in 2017, after which a public consultation will be carried out. The Welsh Labour government said it made a manifesto commitment to establish Historic Wales and the economy secretary said closer collaboration was vital if the bodies are to increase their commercial success. Continued public funding for the institutions is not under threat, but the government says only a closer working relationship can generate more private income and present a united front in marketing Wales' heritage to the world. For many of those who have objected, any new organisation that takes functions away from the national museum will be undermining its independence and stripping it of its ability to raise its own commercial income. The Museums Association has warned that any commercial merger would have a wider negative impact on NMW's exhibition programming and on its ability to form partnerships with communities and museums across Wales. The Welsh Government insists it is taking a pragmatic approach and is keen to listen to expert voices and the public before Historic Wales is established. The keys for Barry Island Pleasure Park were handed over to new owner Henry Danter on Monday following negotiations with former owners Hilco. Mr Danter, who has 50 years fairground experience, said he will move large vehicles onto the site to clear it. He aims to have a small fair on site by Friday. "It's taken a long time to get to this point," said Mr Danter, who also runs Treasure Island fairground in Stourport-on-Severn in Worcestershire. "But we promised the people of Barry we would have it up and running for Easter." Mr Danter said he paid a deposit for the site "quite a long time ago" but the deal had been delayed because it was dependant on Hilco being given planning permission for flats to be built nearby. He plans to invest up to £20m in the fairground, including building an arcade to ensure that it is a year-round attraction. Finance Wales and Barclays have invested in the regeneration project. Beth Cousins, deputy fund manager at Finance Wales, said "Henry and his family have a strong heritage in the fairground industry. "We're confident that their passion and experience will put the pleasure park back on the map as one of Wales' most popular seaside destinations." The park struggled after the nearby Butlins holiday camp closed 18 years ago. Hilco has been asked to comment.
The final form Historic Wales will take is still under discussion, but its purpose is already defined: to merge some of the commercial functions of Cadw with those of National Museum Wales (NMW). [NEXT_CONCEPT] A multi-million pound redevelopment of one of south Wales' most famous fairgrounds will go ahead after a deal on the future of the site was struck.
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In what the court heard could be a legal first, the 86-year-old will be allowed to follow the trial at London's Southwark Crown Court via video link from Stafford Prison. He previously pleaded not guilty to seven counts of indecent assault and one of sexual assault. A trial is due to start in January. The allegations date from 1971 to 2004 and relate to seven girls and women, one of whom was aged under 13. Some of the offences were allegedly committed at BBC Television Centre in west London. Defence lawyer Steve Vullo QC told the judge he had the power to allow defendants to attend their trial via video link in "exceptional circumstances", which applied to the Australian-born entertainer because of his age and health. Mr Vullo said: "He is an 86-year-old man and he is settled where he is. "If he is to attend this trial in person he is likely to be transferred to Wandsworth, which causes him some trepidation. "We would have to say it is exceptional and we say it is exceptional." Wearing a grey suit, white shirt and multi-coloured tie, the former Animal Hospital host appeared via video link for the short hearing on Thursday. The virtual links are frequently used to allow defendants being held on remand to follow preliminary hearings and for witnesses to give evidence. But the court heard discussion over whether a defendant has appeared at their own trial using the technology before in the UK. Judge Alistair McCreath told the court: "I have no personal or anecdotal evidence of a trial being held in this way." He added: "This is an elderly man, not in the best of health, who will be much more effectively be able to participate in his trial by following it and giving evidence - if he elects to do so - than if he was here. "That's a pretty unusual set of circumstances. "I have no difficulty in finding that they are exceptional." He added that if the technology broke down the trial would have to continue "in his temporary absence".
Former TV entertainer Rolf Harris will not have to attend his sex attack trial in person because of his age and health, a judge has ruled.
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The figure is the minimum salary mandated by the Living Wage Foundation. Scottish Labour said it would compel all councils and private firms engaged in council contracts to pay the wage to care workers. But council body Cosla questioned whether local authorities could afford the increase. Scottish Labour said its policy was designed to address the high turnover in care staff and make caring a long-term career. It argued that this would improve the care elderly people receive and relieve some of the pressure on the NHS. The party's deputy leader, Alex Rowley, said patients were having to wait for hours in accident and emergency units because the beds they should be in were occupied by elderly patients who were fit to go home but cannot because the care packages were not available. He added: "We need to ensure that people can be cared for at home or in the community, and key to that is tackling the recruitment and retention problem in the care sector. "Anyone who has been in receipt of care, or has had a family member receive care, knows that carers are just the salt of the earth. The idea that carers are paid no more than the minimum wage just beggars belief. "We need to invest in the NHS to make it fit for the 2040s, not the 1940s. By investing in our care workers now we can save hundreds of millions of pounds in the costs of delayed discharge." A spokesman for Cosla said it had already given its support to delivering a living wage for social care staff. But he added: "We are realistic about the size of the investment this would require. "The question is not whether it is the right thing to do for our staff and the quality of the services they deliver, but how local government is supported to find the necessary levels of investment to deliver it in the current financial climate. "It is also important to understand that pay rates are not the only important issue in relation to the capacity and effectiveness of social care. "We need to be ambitious in addressing the level of reform required to deliver an effective and sustainable health and social care service which prevents unnecessary hospital admissions and readmissions."
Labour has said all council care workers would be paid at least £7.85 an hour if it forms the next Scottish government.
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Media playback is not supported on this device From the pre-match tune that gets you in the zone, to the one that helps you dig deep on that final gruelling mile - music is the greatest motivator. And a piece of research carried out by Dr Costas Karageorghis - a reader in sport psychology from Brunel University - has scientifically proven that music can increase sporting performance. Which got us thinking... To celebrate BBC Music Day, we want you to tell us which piece of music helps or helped your sporting performance: We'll be updating this page with your comments throughout the day. Ready... GO! Here was our first great shout... Jack Stacy on the BBC Sport Instagram - Training montage - Rocky 4 soundtrack Way to go, Jack. Like Rocky, you're a born winner. Now, if anyone else is struggling for inspiration (although the mere sight of Rocky should be inspiration enough) this might help: BBC Music - the 10 best songs to use in spine-tingling sports montages. This, on the other hand, probably won't. Mind you, when you're as good as Usain Bolt, you don't even need sound to get moving. Media playback is not supported on this device Speaking of Usain Bolt... Some of your suggestions on the BBC Sport Facebook page: Chris Cook: Arcade Fire on shuffle got me through my first half marathon. James Watters: The Imperial March from The Empire Strikes Back/Return Of The Jedi. Moody and menacing. Sagar Sunar: I listen to Metallica, slipknot, Megadeth, Iron Maiden and 90s and early R&B and hip hop generally during gym and travels.. gets my blood pumping and my energy up... Slipknot AND R&B, Sagar? Eclectic! Loads of different genres being represented and there's no denying that a good beat helps when you're pounding the streets or the punchbag. Just a few of your favourites so far: Jason Grant: When out running, it has to be #fightthepower by #publicenemy #mysportingsoundtrack Rob Welham: Eminem Lose Yourself is #MySportingSoundtrack #BBCMusicDay #firedup #focussed #racing Bastos: Shook ones - Mobb Deep. Boxing #BBCMusicDay #MySportingSoundtrack Our favourite? This... Media playback is not supported on this device Are you not motivated?! Well how about these? The thump of the drums, the chugging bass lines, the soaring guitar solos - there's a rock song for every sporting occasion. From these suggestions it seems that the faster, the better. Just don't go too hard too early if you want to be able to actually enjoy 'We are the Champions' as you cross the finish line. Whilst we're at it, plenty of people have suggested Oasis is great for getting fired up and, in particular, '(What's the Story) Morning Glory?' Strangely, no-one suggested this cover of 'Wonderwall' from none other than a pre-knighthood Bradley Wiggins Media playback is not supported on this device Whatever you want to call it, sometimes it feels like there's an immovable object which you just don't have it in you to get past. Then *your* song kicks in and you become an unstoppable force and power through. Here's probably the ultimate example of that: This content will not work on your device, please check Javascript and cookies are enabled or update your browser And while we're on that theme: John McEnerney‏ on Twitter: Jim Telfer - "This is your Everest boys" playing on the loop. Music to my ears! Harrison‏ on Twitter: I am training for a marathon by playing The Darkness Last of Our Kind, on repeat. Forever. Tom Elliott‏ on Twitter: #MySportingSoundtrack has to be Not Giving In by Rudimental. Could punch a rhino after the last chorus. Not that I would... Glad to hear it, Tom. Let's not take things too literally.
We all have those special songs which get us pumped up for sport, right?
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The game, run by The Great Escape Game Leeds, challenges players to solve a series of clues to find their way out. Online advertising mentioning people "locked in straight jackets" has been said to stigmatise mental illness. The company has apologised for any offence caused but says the game does not "mock psychiatric illness". More stories from across Yorkshire Dr Nuwan Dissanayaka, a consultant psychiatrist with Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, said he believed the premise of the game "flies in the face" of efforts to end the stigmatisation around mental health. He said: "I'm astonished that in a civilised society in this day and age that we should be demonising mental health, however historical the context, for the sake of entertainment. I think it's wrong." Claire Woodham, a governor for the trust who has been diagnosed with mental health problems, said: "For this [game] to come out and portray people with mental health as being in straight jackets and tied to chairs, as tormented and dangerous individuals, really worries me. "There will be people out there now trying to work up the courage to seek help and this could really deter them from doing that." In a statement issued by the company, it said: "The game does not feature torture and psychiatric illness is not a theme of the game. "We have not stigmatised psychiatric patients as "scary people" or "helpless". "[However] we now understand how some of the wording from the website could be interpreted negatively and will be working to address this, as well as other issues in the coming weeks." It said that before launching the game the company had spoken to a focus group of people affected by psychiatric illnesses, but in light of the criticism it would be speaking to mental health charity Mind, and campaign group Time To Change, in order to avoid further offence. Inderjit Singh, 31, was racing Sukvinder Mannan, 33, who lost control and hit Rebecca McManus, as she waited for a bus to go to a hen night. Singh had admitted dangerous driving, but denied causing the 21-year-old's death in May 2014. He was also cleared of causing serious injury by dangerous driving. Wolverhampton Crown Court was told Singh, of Cranbourne Avenue in the city, had been racing his car on Hagley Road West on the evening of 31 May 2014. Mannan, of Roundhills Road, Halesowen, reached speeds of more than of 100mph in a 40mph zone, the court heard. He lost control of his Mitsubishi Evolution on a bend, causing it to plough into a bus stop where Miss McManus and her friend were standing. He admitted causing death and serious injury by dangerous driving, plus failing to provide a blood sample, at an earlier hearing. Miss McManus had just finished a three-year English Literature and Creative Writing degree at the University of East Anglia. She suffered "catastrophic injuries" and died at the scene. Her friend, who was also 21 at the time of the crash, is still recovering from serious injuries. Sgt Paul Hughes said: "These drivers were not young inexperienced drivers but professional working men who decided to race each other - for reasons we will never understand - along a busy suburban highway. "Rebecca and her friend were on a night out and did the right thing, they planned their night and decided to catch a bus into town. They thought they would be safe. "It was the senseless and reckless actions of two men that changed two families' lives forever." Both men are due to be sentenced on 1 December.
An "escape game" set in a fictional asylum has been criticised by health professionals for "demonising mental health". [NEXT_CONCEPT] A racing motorist, whose rival's car careered into a Birmingham bus stop killing a student, has been cleared of causing her death.
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Dickins dominated the women's KL3 200m final in Racice, while Martin Tweedie took bronze in the men's VL3 200m. Robert Oliver and Nicholas Beighton earned places in Saturday's finals. The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) recently confirmed only kayak events will feature when the sport makes its Paralympic debut at Rio 2016. "I really feel proud to be the first gold medallist in the new KL3 category and I'm really pleased that paracanoe now has a robust classification system moving forward," said Dickins. Chris Coleman's side appeared to be coasting as goals from David Cotterill and Hal Robson-Kanu - the latter a stylish team effort - gave them an early 2-0 lead. But a goal from Vincent Laban and a red card for Wales midfielder Andy King set up a nervous second half. Which players impressed and who had an evening to forget? Marks are out of 10. Had little to do but made a hash of the Cyprus goal. A stark contrast to his man-of-the-match display against Bosnia-Hercegovina. An energetic effort which did not wane even as Wales went down to 10 men. Distribution could have been better but defending was solid. Marshalled the defence in a mature display, ensuring the team approached the game in a calm fashion after being reduced to 10 men. Another fine performance from the Hull defender, who made a number of timely interventions and brave challenges. Composed defensively and a willing support runner in attack, the Swansea City left-back contributed to an industrious team performance. An early yellow card curbed his usual tenacity and forcing him to tread tentatively compared to his forceful display against Bosnia. A promising first-half performance with some neat touches was spoiled by his red card, which made life very difficult for his team-mates. Excelled in a couple of positions, whether that was out wide or as a central attacker, and took his goal smartly. Subjected to brutal treatment from Cyprus but battled on regardless and went close with a couple of efforts. A bright first start from the young winger, running at Cypriot defenders at every opportunity. His positivity led to the corner which produced the first goal. Had no time to make an impact after he was taken off inside two minutes with a shoulder injury. Scored the opening goal and kept the ball well when Wales were looking to hold on to their lead in the second half. Brought on to solidify the midfield following King's red card and did so with a combative but composed performance. Ran out of time to make any telling contributions on his debut.
Paracanoe world champion Anne Dickins led the way as Britain won gold and bronze on day one of the European Championships in the Czech Republic. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Wales maintained their unbeaten record to to remain top of their Euro 2016 qualifying group with a precious 2-1 victory over Cyprus in Cardiff.
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More than 14,000 hate crimes were recorded between July and September. In 10 forces the number of suspected hate crimes increased by more than 50%, compared to the previous three months. Police say their own monitoring suggests incidents have levelled out after the summer's spike. Last October the Home Office published provisional figures which suggested the number of hate crimes in July 2016 had been 41% higher than 12 months earlier. Those 5,468 reports indicated there had been a spike in reports - supporting anecdotal evidence across the country of an increased number of threatening, violent or abusive incidents. The fresh data compiled by the Press Association comes from official statistics which include detailed figures for five core crimes which are deemed to be racially or religiously aggravated, ranging from assaults through to criminal damage. In the three months to September 2016, 33 of the 44 forces in England and Wales saw their highest levels of hate crimes since comparable records began in 2012. Dorset and Nottinghamshire saw the highest percentage increases in reports - 100% and 75% respectively - compared to the levels seen between March and the end of June. That previous period had included the referendum campaign itself and the week immediately after the vote. The Metropolitan Police in London recorded the highest number of hates crimes, with 3,356 in that period, while Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire Police recorded 1,033 and 1,013 respectively. South Yorkshire, Gloucestershire, Surrey and City of London Police posted falls in hate crime. Assistant Chief Constable Mark Hamilton, the National Police Chiefs' Council's lead for hate crime, said: "We know that national and global events have the potential to trigger short-terms rises in hate crime and we saw this following the EU referendum last year. "Police forces took a robust approach to these crimes and reporting returned to previously seen levels. "These numbers are still far too high. We have increased the central reporting and monitoring functions to enable us to recognise spikes earlier. This will be used to assess any threats that may arise and inform local police activity." Analysis by Dominic Casciani, BBC home affairs correspondent While the overall figure from this analysis comes to 14,300 hate crimes in three months, it can't confidently be claimed as a quarterly national record across the UK because of the complicated way that hate crimes are counted. There's no doubt there was a spike after the Brexit vote, but the long-term picture won't become clear for months. And if 2016 turns out to be a record year, there still needs to be some caution about what the figures mean. Sexual offences rose in recent years thanks to more people coming forward to report what had happened to them. If there is a long-term rise in hate crime recorded by police, it may simply reflect that victims have more confidence that it is worth speaking to the police. But David Isaac, chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, warned that many people remained anxious. "It must be sensible to prepare for any possible spikes during the Brexit process," he said. "The triggering of Article 50 is the next major milestone and we must do all we can to discourage hate attacks and to support people who feel at risk." Fizza Qureshi of Migrants' Rights Network, a campaign group that runs an online service encouraging people to report hate crimes and have them recorded on a real-time map, said: "The experience of thousands of people in the UK of discrimination, hostility and at times violence is invisible to many people in Britain - but today's figures lay it bare for all to see." The 41-year-old officiated at May's Champions League final as Real Madrid beat Atletico Madrid on penalties, and was then chosen to referee the Euro 2016 final as Portugal beat France in extra-time in July. To mark the landmarks in his career, Clattenburg had two tattoos inked on his arm while in Spain - one of the Euro 2016 logo and another of the Champions League trophy with 'Final Milano 2016' written underneath. Tattooist Mick Mahon posted photographs of her work on Facebook and wrote: "It's not every Sunday you get to tattoo the world's top football referee... Mark Clattenburg back for more!"
A majority of police forces in England and Wales saw record levels of hate crimes in the first full three months following the EU referendum, according to new analysis. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Premier League referee Mark Clattenburg now has a permanent reminder of taking charge of 2016's biggest football matches.
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A three-year ban is in place on killing fish outside estuary limits with strict controls on numbers in inland waters. The Annan Common Good Fund holds the rights to traditional fishing methods such as haaf, poke and stake netting in much of the area. It has worked up a £50,000 compensation bid which Marine Scotland said it hoped to have resolved by next month. The annual cost of applying the regulations in the area has been estimated at nearly £17,000 due to lost fish licence income. A report to go to the common good fund sub committee outlined progress in efforts to claim the funds. A letter from Marine Scotland confirmed it would consider the bid but it could only be done after compensation for coastal netting had been agreed. It added that it understood the issue was one they were "anxious to resolve" and hoped to respond by the end of February.
Marine Scotland is to consider a compensation claim over new wild salmon protection rules on the Solway Firth.
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Sir Nicholas Winton, from Berkshire, arranged for eight trains to carry 669 mainly Jewish children from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia to London in 1939. He will feature on a set of commemorative postage stamps after more than 105,000 people backed a campaign launched by Jewish News. The stamps will be released in 2016. A petition, launched by Jewish News, argued the stamps would be a "fitting tribute" to Sir Nicholas, who died last month aged 106. It included signatures from Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, former Conservative minister Eric Pickles and Birmingham Edgbaston Labour MP Gisela Stuart. A Royal Mail spokesman said: "One of the purposes of Royal Mail stamps is to honour those who have made important contributions to the UK, and every year we consider hundreds of subjects for inclusion. It is clear that Sir Nicholas Winton is a worthy candidate." Justin Cohen, news editor of the Jewish News, said: "Sir Nicholas shied away from the 'hero' label but we could think of no-one more deserving of this rare honour. "His inspirational story shows that one person truly can make a difference and we hope the stamp will bring his heroic efforts to the attention of even more people." Sir Nicholas, from a German-Jewish family, told no one about his pre-war efforts for half a century, even his wife. He was reunited with some of the children on Esther Rantzen's That's Life TV programme in 1988, after his wife Grete found an old briefcase in the attic with lists of children and letters from their parents. There is a statue of Sir Nicholas, who lived near Maidenhead, at the town's railway station and he was knighted by the Queen in 2003. The 48-year-old, capped 126 times by his country, won a qualifier in Italy with doubles partner Stefano Landonio. Landonio, 46, was once ranked 975 in the world and has coached Maldini since he retired in 2009. The pair will compete at the Aspria Tennis Cup, a Challenger Tour event in Milan which begins on 29 June. The Challenger Tour is the tier below the top-level ATP World Tour, which features the best players in the world. Maldini spent 31 years with AC Milan, 24 of them as a professional, winning seven league titles and the Champions League five times. He will be 49 on the day the Aspria Tennis Cup begins, with 16 doubles pairings competing on clay. A total of 39 suspects were apprehended in Europe and South America, following action by the Spanish National Police, Europol and Interpol. Spanish investigators discovered dark web sites directing users to private WhatsApp groups last year. Researchers then verified these groups were used to share illegal images. House searches conducted during the arrests had led to the seizure of "hundreds of devices containing several terabytes of child sexual exploitation material", according to Europol. Spanish police have added that this included more than 360,000 files. Operation Tantalio involved co-ordinated action in Germany, Spain and Portugal as well as several South American countries including Argentina, Chile and Ecuador. Interpol has said that "hundreds" of the images and videos discovered have been entered into its international child sexual exploitation (ICSE) database. It allows investigators to compare such material and make connections between victims, abusers and locations by "analysing the digital, visual and audio content". Efforts are now being made by police to identify any child victims. "These offenders are pushing the boundaries of modern technologies to try to avoid being caught by law enforcement," said Rob Wainwright, director of Europol. "This case is an excellent example of global law enforcement cooperation, led by the Spanish National Police. "We need to continue to combine our joint resources and skills to tackle this threat to our children and bring these offenders to justice." A spokesperson for WhatsApp, which is owned by Facebook, said: "Child exploitation has no place on WhatsApp. When we're made aware of these accounts, we investigate, disable users that violate our terms, and assist with law enforcement as they track down and prosecute criminals."
A British man who saved hundreds of children from the Holocaust is to be honoured on Royal Mail stamps. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Legendary Italy and AC Milan footballer Paolo Maldini has qualified for a professional tennis tournament on the ATP Challenger Tour. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A network apparently using WhatsApp to distribute images of child sexual exploitation has been disrupted by dozens of arrests, according to police.
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The Connacht centre is the only new cap in the first fifteen with two uncapped players, Leah Lyons and Chloe Pearse, on the bench. Former Dublin gaelic footballer Lindsay Peat makes her first start at prop. It is the first of three November series games for Ireland's women who also face Canada [19 November] and New Zealand [27 November]. Media playback is not supported on this device Ireland head coach Tom Tierney said the game against England's Red Roses marks the start of "what is arguably going to be the biggest season in the history of Ireland's women's rugby". "The Women's Rugby World Cup is now less than nine months away, and while there a lot of rugby to be played between now and then the players are very eager to get things underway in our first ever November series," Tierney said. "We're without some of our more experienced players, but this gives other members of the squad the opportunity to develop their game and get some much needed experience themselves." Captain Niamh Briggs is one of those side-lined as she continues to rehab an injured hamstring injury she picked up in a recent club game. Ireland (v England): M Coyne; N Kavanagh, N Fowley, S Naoupu, A Miller; N Stapleton, L Muldoon; L Peat, C Moloney, A Egan; ML Reilly, O Fitzsimons; C Griffin, C Molloy, P Fitzpatrick. Replacements: L Lyons, F Hayes, F Reidy, K Norris, C Pearse, M Healy, N Caughey, J Shiels. The Tinsley Art Project aims to appoint an artist to develop a design worth up to £450,000. The piece will be Sheffield's largest-ever public art commission and will be funded by energy company E.ON. The company pledged the money to the council after the structures were demolished in August 2008. Andrew Skelton, public art officer at Sheffield City Council, said: "It's an area of change, hope and aspiration." "Tinsley was an absolute heart of our industrial history, but now it's a fantastic area of bio-diversity - a really rich and pleasant environment to be in." The project will be in addition to the construction of the man of steel sculpture which will overlook the M1 at Kimberworth. Mr Skelton said: "I'm hoping that we'll get something that is really innovative and exciting - the crucial thing is that it draws people down there. "In a fantastic part of the city, the regeneration is happening and people should go down and enjoy it. " The 25-year-old boxer suffered a bleed on the skull and was placed in an induced coma after losing his British middleweight title to Eubank Jr. Eubank Jr, 26, who said he had not heard from Blackwell, tweeted: "Hope there's no hard feelings." Blackwell responded: "We were both doing a job and it was unfortunate." It came following an initial post by Blackwell in which he said he was on the mend and had been "very lucky". Blackwell spent more than a week in an induced coma after he was taken to hospital following the fight, which referee Victor Loughlin stopped on the advice of the ringside doctor in the 10th round. The boxer said last week he was getting "better by the day". Eubank Jr said he would like to visit Blackwell in hospital, adding: "I've tried reaching out since you woke."
Nicole Fowley will win her first cap for Ireland on Sunday in the UCD Bowl match against England (14:00 GMT). [NEXT_CONCEPT] A search has begun for an artist to create a public art piece near Sheffield's famous former cooling towers site. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Nick Blackwell says he holds "no hard feelings" towards Chris Eubank Jr as he continues his recovery following their fight in London last month.
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Spurs made the Champions League for the first time during Redknapp's four-year tenure at the club, reaching the quarter-finals in 2011. The 69-year-old says he would not swap manager Mauricio Pochettino's starting XI for any other side in the division. "They have been fantastic under Pochettino," Redknapp told BBC Radio 5 live's Friday Football Social. "I have absolutely loved the way they have played - their football, the pace of the full-backs. "Tottenham will go on and win the Premier League in the next three or four years." Spurs sit third in the Premier League, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea, but lost to Liverpool on Saturday and at Gent in the first leg of their Europa League last-32 tie on Thursday. They have not won the title since 1961 and finished third last year after looking like champions Leicester's main challengers for long periods. But Tottenham expect to have a new 61,000-seater stadium completed in time for the 2018-19 season, which Redknapp, who left the club in 2012, believes will play a big part in any future success. "They've not been up there with the big spenders," he added. "Now with the new stadium the crowds are going to nearly double. "The man who owns the club, Joe Lewis, is up there with the richest men in the world. So there's certainly no shortage of money. "Maybe they do run out of steam, maybe he [Pochettino] hasn't been able to rotate and could do with another three or four top players to give him the strength in depth. "If you said to me 'go and manage any team you want', I would take Tottenham's best XI."
Tottenham Hotspur will win the Premier League within the next four years, says former manager Harry Redknapp.
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Officers said there were "significant concerns" for Robert McLaren's welfare. The 70-year-old was reported missing from his home in Appin Terrace, but was last seen at shops in Rannoch Road at 08:08 on 20 February. Police are carrying out house to house inquiries and studying CCTV as part of the search for the missing pensioner. He wearing a black donkey jacket, a beige baseball cap with a white logo on the front, blue jeans or trousers and brown shoes when he was last seen. Mr McLaren is 5ft 7in, of large build, with a pale complexion, and a balding head with short grey hair around the sides. He has connections to the Coupar Angus area and is known to walk in the area of Jeanfield Road and the North Inch, Perth. Officers said they would welcome assistance from local businesses or residents who may have private CCTV. A Police Scotland spokesman said: "Local residents are asked to check sheds, garages and outbuildings for any signs that someone might have taken refuge, either overnight or temporarily. "There are significant concerns for Robert's welfare and anyone who knows him or has seen a man matching his description is asked to contact Police Scotland on 101."
Police have launched a new appeal to trace a pensioner missing from his home in Letham since 25 February.
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The Scarlets back-rower, 29, admits he was 'slightly surprised' to be called up for the Six Nations but is desperate to play for his country again. Barclay, capped 45 times, is in contention for a place in the match-day 23 to face England on Saturday. "I am still massively motivated and still feel I have a lot to offer at this level," he said. "My hopes are pretty high. I am certainly not coming up here hoping to just hold bags for the next six to eight weeks. I am delighted to be here and I am desperate to play." The popular Barclay played in two of Scotland's World Cup warm-up matches last summer, his first caps since 2013. But he was omitted from the final World Cup squad in favour of John Hardie - recently arrived from New Zealand - while another adopted Kiwi, Blair Cowan, was summoned as a second specialist open-side during the group stages. Asked if he thought that signalled the end of his Test career, which began against New Zealand in 2007, Barclay said: "Yeh, I thought so, because I hadn't been in it for a while before the World Cup. "But I think Vern is a pretty fair guy. If you are playing well, you generally get picked. When he phoned me I was slightly surprised but obviously very happy. "I didn't even know when the squad was being announced because I haven't put too much emphasis on it. I try to do my own thing really, and if you do that well enough, you will get picked. "But the fact I am more philosophical about things doesn't mean I am not gutted when I am not playing for Scotland, and that I am not hugely motivated when I do play." With Cotter picking both Hardie and Cowan in Scotland's last Test, their World Cup quarter-final defeat against Australia, Barclay's versatility - he has played in all three back-row positions for the Scarlets this season - could serve him well as Scotland finalise their 23 to play England. The Scots have not beaten England in their last eight meetings since 2008, but optimism is high north of the border that run could come to an end on Saturday, with the visitors starting a new era under head coach Eddie Jones. Barclay does not expect a radically different approach from England, however. "I believe there is only a finite number of ways you can change things, and they have picked very similar players by the looks of it," he added. "They will play to their strengths, they have always been strong up front. They can't re-invent the wheel in a week. We are just trying to focus on ourselves and what we can do to put pressure on them and test their mind-set."
Scotland flanker John Barclay thought his Test career might be over after missing out on their World Cup squad.
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The plummeting balloon, measuring 12m (39ft) in height, was spotted by a pedestrian who thought a light aircraft was in trouble and contacted police. Google said it would repay the cost of sending the helicopter to the scene. In June 2013, 30 balloons were launched by Google in New Zealand to provide wi-fi in remote areas. The call to the emergency services initially led to the launch of a lifeboat off the South Island's east coast. The helicopter was called in when the rescuers could not recover the balloon because of rough conditions. "We will get in touch with the Westpac rescue helicopter crew to reimburse them for the mistaken rescue flight," Google spokesman Johnny Luu told news site Stuff New Zealand. Last year's launch marked the start of Google's Project Loon, which will eventually employ up to 400 balloons encircling the Earth to give people wireless net access. The balloons will float in the stratosphere around the Earth's 40th parallel, providing wi-fi to buildings fitted with a special antenna. They are designed to stay up for about 100 days, and when they descend, co-ordinators try to guide them down on to land. Most balloons were recovered after landing, Mr Luu added.
An emergency helicopter has been mistakenly scrambled after a Google wi-fi balloon ditched in the sea near Christchurch in New Zealand.
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Paul Briggs, 43, remains in hospital more than a year after he was hit by Chelsea Rowe in Birkenhead, Merseyside. Liverpool Crown Court heard the 26-year-old had been driving on the wrong side of the road. Rowe, from Bidston, Wirral, admitted causing serious injury by dangerous driving and was jailed for a year. The court was told she had been driving a Nissan Micra when she collided head-on with Merseyside Police officer Pc Briggs on the Birkenhead flyover. He had been riding his motorcycle to work for a nightshift on 3 July, 2015. The married father-of-one, who is also a Gulf War and North Ireland veteran, suffered serious multiple injuries. Rowe was described as a "novice driver" in court. During the sentencing hearing, Mr Briggs' wife Lindsey said her husband's injuries meant it was "much worse than if he had died at the scene". Their ordeal was "beyond torture", she said. "No words can begin to describe the immense pain. "While Paul remains in a horrific state it is beyond devastating and affects every aspect of all our lives for the worse. "We have had to endure seeing him like this every day, for many long difficult months now." She said her husband was in an "unresponsive state" and has been "kept alive purely by medical intervention for so long, it has shattered all of our lives". "I never knew that states worse than death existed until this happened to Paul." Speaking after the sentencing, Merseyside Police's acting Deputy Chief Constable Nikki Holland said Pc Briggs had joined the police to help others in need and "loved" his job. He was highly regarded by his colleagues due to his military experience, she said. She added: "If ever there was a case that reminded us all of the importance of our responsibilities when we are behind the wheel of a car and of the importance of being aware of other road users it is this one."
A "novice" driver who struck a police motorcyclist, leaving him with serious brain injuries and unable to communicate, has been jailed.
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Martina Anderson made the comments in the European Parliament on Tuesday. DUP MP Gavin Robinson responded in the House of Commons. He addressed Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire and called on him to remind Ms Anderson that "it's the Good Friday Agreement that sets the terms for the future of Northern Ireland". "It's based on the majority will of the people and it hasn't changed," he said. Mr Brokenshire replied to Mr Robinson saying: "We do stand behind the Belfast Agreement and the principle of consent that is contained within it". Sinn Féin said Ms Anderson was reflecting anger over Brexit. No comment has been made by the party's Stormont leader Michelle O'Neill.
A Sinn Féin MEP who said the prime minister could stick a hard or soft Irish border where the "sun doesn't shine" was dismissed as "belligerent".
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People living in Moneygall queued for up to six hours to get their hands on one of the special invitations. The president's great, great, great-grandfather - Fulmouth Kearney - came from the County Offaly village, before emigrating to America in 1850. On Monday afternoon, Mr Obama will retrace his Irish roots by visiting Moneygall, in the heart of the Irish countryside 86 miles south-west of Dublin. An exclusion zone around the village will be put in place but a limited number of tickets were distributed last week for people to watch the presidential visit. Residents of the village got priority. Willie Jones, 57, has lived in the village all of his life. "This golden ticket is precious," he said. "If we put it on the market, we could get anything from 500 to 1,000 euros. "They are like gold dust. They're wanted in every part of the parish and outside it. People are coming from Wexford, Dublin and God knows where. But no money will buy it." Moneygall has a population of 300 people, but during an hour-long tour of the main street I could only find one person willing to part with their cherished ticket. Paul O'Reilly said: "Give me 500 euros and you can have it in a heartbeat." So why was he willing to sell? "It's just like the Queen visit - you are not going to see too much of it. "You're just going to see a flash of him. That's it. You'll see more on the TV than you will around the village." Security restrictions mean that even if people want to transfer their tickets, it is unlikely that they will be able to do so. Photo identification, names and addresses will be checked by police along with every ticket. The security operation is huge. Police officers are in every field around the village. Some have taken shelter under trees, leading to one local wag joking that "they must be special branch". Moneygall has two pubs but has no bank, cash machine or petrol station. Like the rest of Ireland, County Offaly has been hit hard by the collapse of the Celtic Tiger economy. However, a number of new shops have opened in advance of the visit, selling Obama souvenirs including T-shirts which say: "What's the craic Barack?" Another says: "O'Bama: Is Feidir Linn" - that is Irish for "yes, we can". Notice the apostrophe. Obama has become O'Bama in Ireland. A new coffee shop - Obama cafe - has been built in Moneygall. One of those involved, Mark Costello, said the presidential visit has been good for local businesses. "We've used local electricians, painters. It's been a much-needed boost for people here. "People are out chatting on the street all the time now. It harks back to the old days when I was a kid." In Ollie Hayes' pub on Moneygall's main street, President Obama is likely to sip a pint of the black stuff on Monday afternoon. Unlike most barmen, Ollie Hayes is unlikely to be very talkative. He lost his voice last week, blaming too many TV interviews. Other residents of the village are happy to do the talking for him. Pensioner Marie Shepherd said: "The atmosphere is electric. It's wonderful for Ireland. I'm delighted that I lived to see it." One of Obama's distant relatives is still in the village. Henry Healy is the President's eighth cousin, and is due to meet him during the whistlestop visit. He said: "I can barely sleep - rehearsing what I am going to say to him." If he is stuck he can always ask: "What's the craic Barack?" The alert began after a suspicious object was found in the Andersonstown Road area. It was examined by Army bomb disposal experts who declared it "a small viable explosive device". It has been removed for further forensic examination. Police have appealed for anyone with any information to contact them. All roads have now reopened.
Residents of a small Irish village are getting ready to welcome Barack Obama, and clinging tightly to their "golden tickets" to see the US president. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A small bomb has been found during an alert in west Belfast.
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Chloe Hewitt, 20, was aged eight when Strictly Come Dancing began airing on BBC One in 2004. She will be joined in the professional line-up by her dance partner AJ Pritchard, with whom she appeared on Britain's Got Talent in 2013. Neil Jones, whose wife Katya was added to the line-up last month, completes the trio of new arrivals. Hewitt, who was born in Chester, took up dancing lessons after watching Strictly as a child. Last year she and Pritchard, 21, were crowned British Open Youth Latin Champions and also European Youth Latin Champions. Over their nine-year competitive career they have been the National Youth Latin Champions for three years in a row, from 2012 to 2014. "My childhood dream of being on Strictly Come Dancing is now reality," Hewitt said. "The sheer excitement is exhilarating and I cannot wait to be part of the Strictly family." Jones is the undefeated four-time British National Champion and the three-time winner of the World Amateur Latin Championships with wife Katya. "We are very excited that three British champions are joining the Strictly family," said Louise Rainbow, Strictly's executive producer. The other male professionals on the new series are Kevin Clifton, Brendan Cole, Anton Du Beke, Pasha Kovalev, Gorka Marquez, Giovanni Pernice and Aljaz Skorjanec. Joanne Clifton, Karen Clifton, Natalie Lowe, Janette Manrara and Oti Mabuse round out the female professional contingent. Follow us on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, on Instagram at bbcnewsents, or email [email protected]. The game, to be played at Everton's Goodison Park on 3 September, will feature two teams managed by model Katie Price and boxer Tony Bellew. Players will include ex-Everton stars Peter Beardsley and Alan Stubbs, former Sunderland left-back Micky Gray and singer-songwriter Olly Murs. Sunderland fan Bradley died from a rare type of cancer aged six. The players, who also include X-Factor winner turned Coronation Street actor Shayne Ward and Steps star Lee Latchford-Evans, will line up for either Bradley's Blues or The Lowery Legends. Evertonians formed a special bond with the youngster, initially during Everton's match at Sunderland in September 2016 and then when he was a guest at Goodison Park for two matches in January and February this year. Ex-Everton player and club ambassador Graham Stuart said the game would be "a chance to celebrate Bradley's life" and raise money for the Bradley Lowery Foundation. The charity was set up after the youngster's death to help other young children suffering illness. Former Black Cats and Toffees player Don Hutchison added: "I've been privileged to play for both sides and I couldn't think of two better sets of fans to play in front of, for young Bradley."
Strictly Come Dancing has signed up its youngest professional dancer for when the show returns this autumn. [NEXT_CONCEPT] TV stars will join former footballers for a celebrity charity match in memory of Bradley Lowery.
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Sue Faulkner got in touch with Get Inspired to tell us all about how she recently took on her first triathlon - at the age of 63. This is her story. "Last year I went to visit my son and his family to watch him do a sprint triathlon. I was chatting with my daughter-in-law (who already runs marathons) and she joked that she'd be game for trying out a triathlon... but only if I did too. To her surprise, I took up the challenge! We realised that we could do it on the same day as my eight-year-old granddaughter, who would also be doing her first triathlon, so we would have three generations doing it on the same day. My first question was: 'OK, I'm going to do this, but how do I start?' Firstly, I bought some trainers - I didn't own a pair previously. My first run was with my granddaughter alongside the canal, which was nice and flat. I could only manage 20 paces at a time before walking a short way, then running another 20 paces. It was a start. I was more confident when it came to the swimming, as I swim regularly at a small pool in my village, although I only learned to swim front crawl 11 years ago when I was living in Japan. I had accidentally joined a swimming class, thinking it was an exercise group, but luckily it was all done by demonstration as no one spoke English. I am sure I missed the finer points but it was just enough. Now for the bike. I hadn't ridden one for 10 years and was a bit nervous. The bike I used initially was an old one of my son's which was a bit worse for wear as he'd had it when he was 15. I was rather wobbly and didn't feel at all safe. However, after several tentative weeks, my lovely husband bought me a new hybrid bike for Christmas. I was so excited and at last I felt in control of the bike instead of it being in control of me. My first run was with my granddaughter by the canal, which was nice and flat. I only managed 20 paces before walking a short way, then running another 20 paces. It was a start The running gradually improved and after about eight weeks I could run 2.5km, which was the distance of the race. All was going well until eight weeks before the race. Frustratingly I caught a cold, which gave me a cough, so I couldn't run. I then had a stomach upset which left me feeling weak, followed by an ear infection which meant I couldn't swim. My balance was also affected so there would be no cycling. For four weeks I couldn't train and at times I felt as if I would never regain my normal strength, let alone enough energy to race. But there was no way I could quit, as by now there was a lot riding on this challenge. I am the chairman of our local swimming club and had decided to get sponsorship to raise funds for a replacement pool. Our pool is going to be demolished to make way for a housing development and hotel, so a large amount of money is required and I was hoping my funds would be a start. The pool is rented out by the hour and is fully booked - 12 hours a day, seven days a week. In that sense, it's financially sustainable. It is kept warmer than most pools, so is suitable for the young, the not-so-young and those with disabilities. Ultimately we feel it is a vital part of our community, especially keeping our older residents active - the oldest swimmer is 93 - and we desperately need a replacement. This all meant there was a lot resting on my shoulders as I didn't want to let anyone down, so I did manage to resume training. The day of the triathlon dawned; it was bright and sunny after an early morning shower. We arrived at Kimberley (in Nottingham) and got ready for the swim. My supporters tell me I did 12 lengths instead of 10: I got lost between the pool and transition, found a dead end and had to retrace my steps (my glasses were with my bike and I couldn't make out the gateway to the field). The bike section was fun but the run was really hard. It has always been my least favourite element but I ran all the way, never walking and finally crossed the finishing line. There was lots of support from six of my grandchildren cheering: "Go Nanna go!" I expected to come last, so imagine my surprise when I saw the results. I was 26th out of 41 and first in my age group (60-64). I was on 'cloud nine' for days. My daughter-in-law and granddaughter completed their course too. I am so pleased to have become fitter that I am determined not to lose it, and am contemplating doing double the distance next year... you never know! I have also raised over £1200 in sponsorship towards our new pool. It's a small step, but one in the right direction." Are you inspired to try Triathlon? Or maybe you are a keen enthusiast already? Get in touch and tell us your experience of the activity by tweeting us on @bbcgetinspired or email us on [email protected]. See our full list of activity guides for more inspiration.
People across the country are proving age is no barrier to getting active, even if it means taking up a completely new challenge later in life.
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All able-bodied South Korean men are obliged to complete two years of military service between the ages of 18 and 35. Bae had hoped to delay his service to continue his golfing career, but the Daegu court said the military had been right to deny the request. He said he would "humbly accept" the ruling, said the Yonhap news agency. Bae, who is based in the US, also apologised to his fans, saying he had been "doing the best" he could to extend his stay so he could remain in competition. "But the court's ruling today reminded me of the fact I should put my duty as a South Korean citizen ahead of my golfing career," he said. "I decided that I can mature further as a golfer by returning home as soon as I can and complete my mandatory military service." Bae is currently ranked 107 globally by the PGA. The court said it was aware Bae would financially lose out by missing out on PGA Tours, but said that "for everyone facing conscription, dreams are all precious". "If an athlete is allowed to arbitrarily schedule when he'd enter the military because he'd lose more money than others, then it would damage the idea of fairness in conscription and also the morale among the troops." Bae, who is currently competing in the RBC Canadian Open in Ontario, has not yet indicated when he will return to South Korea. Proposed changes to the PGA Tour regulations could, however, mean he would be allowed to return to the tour at the same level after completing his military service. The rules, expected to be approved next week, would mean that "mandatory obligations" would be considered alongside medical and family crises as grounds for allowing a player to return despite missing key competitions.
South Korean golfer and two-time PGA Tour winner Bae Sang-moon has lost his attempt to delay his military service.
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The site is set to "double in size" by 2026 with ten new buildings including two tower blocks, 1,400 properties and a multi-storey car park. More than 7,000 people, including about 3,000 BBC and 900 ITV staff, are employed at the £650m site which first opened in 2011. MPs in Salford called for the expansion to include more jobs for local people. Salford Council said plans to expand MediaCityUK formed the second phase of a 20-year plan to transform the former docklands. A spokesman said the 10-year build would create hundreds of new jobs for the area. Rebecca Long Bailey, Labour MP for Salford and Eccles, called for firms in MediaCityUK to make "real investment in quality apprenticeships for local people". "I would like to see companies in MediaCity agree to aim for a minimum percentage of apprentices who live locally." Her Labour colleague Barbara Keeley, the MP for Worsley and Eccles South, also said: "The way that MediaCity was established it probably didn't generate enough new opportunities for local people to get jobs and that is something that needs to happen. "I know the BBC has got a great apprenticeship scheme and I think the more organisations that advertise their opportunities locally that take on young people, and develop relationships with schools and academies locally the more that will help," she added. Former Salford MP Hazel Blears complained in 2012 that only 26 of 680 new BBC jobs created in Salford had gone to local residents although the BBC said it had to recruit on skills and experience "not postcode". In 2006, the 200-acre site was chosen by the BBC to relocate some of its departments to the North of England and the Salford Quays site was developed in a partnership with Salford City Council, developer Peel Holdings and development bodies. The first phase of MediaCityUK, which is now complete, includes office and studio space for BBC departments, the relocation of ITV Granada and the Coronation Street set, along with 250 digital firms and the University of Salford journalism department.
A £1bn expansion of the MediaCityUK has been approved by councillors in Salford.
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S Balakrishnan bought the Delhi Zaika restaurant owned by Dawood Ibrahim for 40.5m Indian rupees (£444,000; $673,500) in December. He made a payment of three million rupees, but was unable to pay the rest. Mr Balakrishnan had said he wanted to to turn the Mumbai property into an education centre for the poor. The former journalist was seeking donations to complete the payment, which he was required to do within 30 days of purchasing the property. He has complained that he was effectively given only 20 days to do so, because of holidays like Christmas and New Year. A report in The Hindu newspaper said that a request to authorities to extend the deadline for payment by a month had been declined. The property is now likely to be auctioned again. Ibrahim is a fugitive in India and has been charged with masterminding the 1993 Mumbai serial bombings. Some 257 people died and more than 700 others were wounded in the attacks. India alleges that Ibrahim lives in the Pakistani city of Karachi, but Islamabad has always denied the charge. Mr Balakrishnan had said that the government's earlier attempts to sell the restaurant had failed because people were afraid to buy the underworld don's property. He has complained that this fear had also prevented people from giving him donations to buy the property. Ibrahim was named a "global terrorist" in October 2003, and in June 2006, then US President George W Bush labelled him a "foreign narcotics trafficker". He is accused of smuggling narcotics from Afghanistan and Thailand to the US, Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa.
A Mumbai social worker who bought a restaurant owned by India's "most wanted man" has had to forfeit the property.
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The Duke of Edinburgh has decided to stand down from public engagements at the age of 95, with the full support of the Queen. He carried out 110 days of engagements in 2016, making him the fifth busiest member of the Royal Family - despite his age. Here other nonagenarians reveal why they are still working and whether they plan on reaching Prince Philip's milestone. Ella Towell, 90, works two days a week at the Claire House Children's Hospice charity shop in Mold, north Wales. Her previous jobs included working in an engineering firm, a canteen and as a factory supervisor. "I decided to start volunteering because I had a look around the Claire House Children's Hospice and was impressed with the nursing staff and I thought, 'Gosh, I'd like to help.' "I spoke to the manageress of the shop in Buckley and she said, 'Get here now and get your coat off.' I worked every day there for six years. "My family started grumbling at me that I was always in the shop and wanted to take me out so I decided to retire at 86. I had only stopped two weeks when the area manageress asked me to do two days a week in the Mold shop so I did. "I still want to do it because of when I went to the hospice. The nurses and volunteers there should have Victoria Crosses. "It's not difficult getting up and getting into the shop. I'm downstairs before five o'clock in the morning. I don't go to bed early but I've never needed that much sleep. "I'm still active. My usual routine is get up, first big mug of tea with a tablespoon of whisky in it. I've done it for years and I haven't got arthritis. "I serve customers behind the counter and I'm on the till at the shop. People aren't surprised I'm working at 90, they know what I'm like. "I don't have any plans to give it up for good. I still feel I'm able to help the community at large, especially places like Claire House. "Children's welfare interests me. If someone comes into the shop with a kiddy in a pushchair, I'm there pulling faces. "If I can carry on until 95 I will do. You can never predict what your health will be like, but I hope so." Irene Astbury, 90, works full time at Pet Food Supplies in Macclesfield, Cheshire. She set up the shop with her late husband, Les, 36 years ago. "We opened the shop on 9 March 1981 and took £9 that day. We thought, 'What have we let ourselves in for?' as it was slow to begin with. "I've been coming to the shop for the last 36 years and don't know any different. It's not hard working 40 hours a week as it's what I know. "People can't believe and are quite surprised when they hear I'm 90. "I still serve a few customers and will answer the phone occasionally. "I enjoy making everyone a cup of tea and toast at brew time and my three great-grandchildren, Evie (six), Isabelle (three) and Harry (one), come to the shop most days. I enjoy seeing them and playing 'shops' with the older two girls. "I still enjoy working, even at my age. I enjoy meeting people and customers and talking to them as I'm interested in what they're all up to. "I don't have any plans at all to retire. As long as my legs will still bring me to the shop I have no plans to stop working. "My gran was 102 when she died so I have a long way to go yet. "The secret to a long and active life is to keep going, enjoy it, along with good health. "I can still see myself working up until the age of 95 just like Prince Philip did. Longer if I can." Want to age well - how about never retiring? The women still working into their 70s Still working at 100 years old Cliff Parker, 90, works for Focus Education, a company founded by his daughter, Linda, which provides educational support to primary schools and academies, in Saddleworth, Oldham. He served in the army during the 1940s and went on to become a grocer, landlord and worked for Oldham Council. "I choose to still work at the age 90 because it gives me something to get up for in the morning. "I bind educational books in the mornings, and in the afternoon I deliver books and parcels to schools. I'm the errand boy in the afternoons. "I like being busy and being around people, no-one can bind books as good as me. "It's not difficult to get up for every morning for work. I am always up early. "I could start later in a morning if I wanted to do, but I enjoy going to work and joining in with the staff and I love being with company. "I don't want to retire, working is what keeps me going. I don't want to sit at home and do nothing. "People can't believe I am still working at my age, they say it's brilliant. "I love going to work every morning and it gives me a purpose in life. "I can definitely see myself working until the age of 95. Unless I pop my clogs first."
"Age is nothing but a number," the saying goes, and Prince Philip has shown you can still carry on working into your 90s.
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BBC News takes a closer look at the new leader of the Latin American country. Pedro Pablo Kuczynski's father, Maxime Hans Kuczynski, was born in Poznan, in Poland. He later became a doctor in Berlin. He left Berlin after Adolf Hitler came to power and arrived in Peru with his Swiss wife in 1936. Pedro Pablo was born in 1938 in Lima, but his family soon moved to Iquitos, in the Peruvian Amazon, where his father worked as a doctor fighting leprosy and yellow fever. He also spent part of his childhood in Puno and Cusco. Pedro Pablo Kuczynski says that seeing his father working in some of the poorest parts of the country instilled in him a desire to strive for more equality in Peru. He says that his mother, who taught literature, was his inspiration to get a first-class education. He won a scholarship to the University of Oxford, where he studied philosophy, politics and economics. He also got a master's degree from the prestigious Princeton University in the US. At the age of 23, he was hired by the World Bank. He later returned to Peru to work for Peru's Central Bank. In 1980, he was named energy and mining minister by then-President Fernando Belaund. He also served as economy and mining minister twice, from 2001 to 2002 and again from 2004 to 2005. Pedro Pablo Kuczynski is a centre-right politician who believes in the free market. He says he wants to create a more equal country and fight corruption. Asked before the election where he stood politically, he said: "Peru does not want extremism. We are the centre. What does it mean being at the centre? Very simple: great economic growth to finance social investments." He wants to lower the tax rate for small businesses and make it easier for them to get credit. Mr Kuczynski campaigned on a promise of creating more equality for Peruvians. He says he wants to improve education by raising teachers' salaries and investing in schools. He has also promised to improve access to drinking water and give more support to Peru's farmers. On an international level, he says he aims to improve relations with neighbouring Chile, which have at times been tense due to a dispute over their maritime border. Peru's Congress is dominated by his rival's Popular Force party, which won 73 seats in legislative elections in April. Mr Kuczynski's party only holds 13 seats in the 130-seat Congress. It will therefore not be easy for Mr Kuczynski to push his proposed plans through Congress. Some of the left-wing groups who threw their support behind Mr Kuczynski to ensure the defeat of his rival, Keiko Fujimori, have already said they will not back his economic policies. He will also have to try to combat crime and improve security, as many voters named those as their main concerns.
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski has narrowly won the presidential elections in Peru.
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The 29-year-old is the latest player to pledge his future to Ulster after Ruan Pienaar, Nick Williams and Robbie Diack all signed contract extensions. "I am delighted to have committed to Ulster for the long term," said Henry. "It is a great team to be a part of, and there is no doubt when it comes to winning silverware, we have some unfinished business." Henry, who has won eight caps for Ireland as well as playing 109 times for Ulster, is hoping to win a trophy with the province after defeats in the Heineken Cup final and Pro12 final in the past two seasons. He is also targeting a place in Joe Schmidt's Ireland squad for the World Cup in 2015. "In my opinion, being at Ulster gives me the best chance to fulfil that ambition," he said. "This squad is getting better and better. "We have experience as well as young players coming through, who are proving that they can perform at the very highest level." Ulster's Director of Rugby David Humphreys said: "Chris has been a cornerstone of our success in recent years". "His performance against Montpellier typified what he brings to the Ulster team, namely commitment, intensity and ferocity at the breakdown. "It would be hard to find anyone who is more passionate about playing for Ulster than Chris Henry and I am extremely pleased he will be part of the squad until at least 2017."
Ulster forward Chris Henry has signed a new three-year deal keeping him at Ravenhill until 2017.
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Police were called to East Lancashire Road in Salford shortly after 18:10 BST to reports of a pedestrian being struck by a bus. Officers found a woman believed to be in her 70s with very serious injuries. She was taken to hospital where she died at about 19:40. Police, who are appealing for witnesses, said officers were providing the woman's family with support.
A woman has died after being hit by a bus in Greater Manchester.
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The man, who was walking with his son, suffered head injuries in the fall from Striding Edge, Helvellyn, on Saturday. Low cloud prevented an air ambulance from attending, but an RAF Sea King helicopter took paramedics and members of the Patterdale Mountain Rescue Team as close as it could. Despite CPR being carried out by his son and other walkers, the man was pronounced dead at the scene. Mike Blakey, from the mountain rescue team, said: "The man and his son were well equipped. "Those people who were walking on the ridge at the time, and who risked their own safety to assist the man, should be commended. "They did everything they could to help."
A walker has died in a fall from a popular Lake District mountain route.
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England defender John Stones cost City £47.5m when they signed him from Everton in August and he is one of five English players in City's squad. Guardiola says City are hopeful of instead promoting young English players from the academy. "I would like to have English players, believe me, but they are so expensive," the Spaniard said. "I would like to play with English players. When I was in Barcelona I liked to play with locals because they feel something special, but sometimes it is not possible." The five Englishmen in City's first-team squad are Stones, Raheem Sterling, Fabian Delph, 19-year-old defender Tosin Adarabioyo and reserve goalkeeper Angus Gunn. England goalkeeper Joe Hart is on a season-long loan at Serie A club Torino. The last City academy player to graduate to being a regular starter in the first team was defender Micah Richards, who left the club in 2015. But Guardiola is confident of changing that. "That is why the club has worked for a long period with the academy, thinking about the next years," the 46-year-old said. "With me or without me - hopefully with me - I would like to enjoy these four or five guys who are growing, and play with them." The All Blacks were exceptional in the first half in Sydney and, with the help of three tries in seven minutes, stormed to a 40-6 lead at half-time. Rieko Ioane and Ryan Crotty each scored two tries for New Zealand, while Liam Squire, Sonny Bill Williams, Damian McKenzie and Ben Smith went over. Meanwhile, South Africa ran in four tries as they powered to a 37-15 win over Argentina. The sides face each other again next Saturday. New Zealand flanker Jerome Kaino missed the match. He flew home after details about an alleged extra-marital affair emerged in the Australian press hours before kick-off. The Kiwis led 54-6 at one point in the second half before late tries from the home side rescued some pride. Australia's tries came from Curtis Rona, Tevita Kuridrani, Kurtley Beale and Israel Folau. "It was pretty surreal that first half to be honest," said New Zealand captain Kieran Read "We came here to play our game and it really came off. It was a pretty awesome first half. "It came about by the doing the simple things. We carried really hard and exploited a few gaps out wide." Ghana-born Raymond Rhule and fellow winger Courtnall Skosan scored their first international tries as South Africa claimed victory over Argentina in Port Elizabeth. The Springboks dominated the physical contest and also secured tries through flanker Siya Kolisi and lock Pieter-Steph du Toit for their fourth victory in a row after a 3-0 series victory over France. Argentina managed tries through experienced scrum-half Martin Landajo and winger Emiliano Boffelli. "We couldn't have asked for a better start (to the competition)," said South Africa captain Eben Etzebeth.
Manager Pep Guardiola says he would like more English players at Manchester City, but has bemoaned their cost. [NEXT_CONCEPT] New Zealand hammered Australia 54-34 in their Rugby Championship opener.
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Qatari officials say that about 15,000 camels and 10,000 sheep have already crossed the border. An emergency makeshift shelter with water tanks and fodder has been set up in Qatar. Many Qataris keep their cattle in Saudi Arabia, because the tiny Gulf kingdom does not have enough pastures. Earlier this month, Saudi Arabia and a number of other Arab states cut diplomatic ties and all transport links with Qatar over the kingdom's alleged support for Islamic extremism. Qatar rejects the accusations. The Qatari ministry of municipality and environment says the makeshift shelter will operate until more suitable areas are prepared. Animal experts, drivers and other personnel are already at the site to provide any assistance to animal owners, the ministry says. Qatari official Jassim Qattan told al-Raya website on Monday that 25,000 camels and sheep had already returned to Qatar. Videos posted on social media in recent days show big herds of camels crossing Saudi Arabia's desert border. Until now, the Saudi authorities put no restrictions on Qatari-owned animals grazing on Saudi pastureland. The latest move by Riyadh has triggered angry reaction among Qatari herdsmen. "We just want to live out our days, to go to Saudi Arabia and take care of our camels and go back and take care of our family," Ali Magareh, 40, was quoted as saying by Reuters. "We don't want to be involved in these political things. We are not happy," he added. Police were called to West Walk in the Sneinton area of Nottingham just after 06:00 GMT. A 27-year-old man was found with a stab wound and died as a result of his injuries. Nottinghamshire Police said inquiries are ongoing into the circumstances surrounding his death and asked anyone with information to contact them.
Saudi Arabia has said all camels and sheep owned by Qataris must leave its pastureland, in a growing row between Qatar and other Gulf states. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A 43-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a man who was stabbed later died.
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The game was as good as over by half-time as two goals from Smith and another from Steven Doris saw the hosts leading 3-0 at the interval. Smith completed his treble less than a minute into the second half with a brilliant 25-yard strike before Lewis McLear made it 5-0. Sean Dickson and Doris again rounded off a miserable night for the visitors.
Darren Smith scored a hat-trick as Stirling brought Montrose's good recent run to a shuddering halt.
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The fissure, which threatens to spawn one of the biggest bergs ever seen, has dramatically changed direction. "The rift has propagated a further 16km, with a significant apparent right turn towards the end, moving the tip 13km from the ice edge," said Swansea University's Prof Adrian Luckman. The calving of the berg could now be very close, he told BBC News. However, he also quickly added that nothing was certain. The fissure currently extends for about 200km in length, tracing the outline of a putative berg that covers some 5,000 sq km - an area about a quarter of the size of Wales. The crack put on its latest spurt between 25 May and 31 May. These dates were the two most recent passes of the European Union's Sentinel-1 satellites. Their radar vision is keeping up a constant watch as the White Continent moves into the darkness of deep winter. After some initial activity at the beginning of the year, the Larsen crack became stationary as it entered what is termed a "suture" zone - a region of soft, flexible ice. But this situation held only until the beginning of May, when the rift tip then suddenly forked. And it is the new branch that has now extended and turned towards the ocean. When the berg's calving does finally take place, the block will probably drift away quite gradually from the ice shelf. "It's unlikely to be fast because the Weddell Sea is full of sea-ice, but it'll certainly be faster than the last few months of gradual parting. It will depend on the currents and winds," explained Prof Luckman. Taking out such a large chunk of ice would mean the Larsen C shelf would lose more than 10% of its area. Previous research by the Swansea group has shown that this will put the shelf in a much less stable configuration. Similar calving events on the more northerly Larsen A and Larsen B ice shelves eventually led to their total break-up. Scientists are concerned that this same fate could now await Larsen C. Were the shelf to collapse (and even if it did, it would still take many years to complete), it would continue a trend across the Antarctic Peninsula. In recent decades, a dozen major ice shelves have disintegrated, significantly retreated or lost substantial volume - including Prince Gustav Channel, Larsen Inlet, Larsen A, Larsen B, Wordie, Muller, Jones Channel, and Wilkins. Prof Luckman's MIDAS Project is posting updates on the Larsen crack on its blog, and on its Twitter feed. [email protected] and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos
There has been an important development in the big crack cutting across the Larsen C Ice Shelf in Antarctica.
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Agbeze, who plays for Adelaide Thunderbirds in Australia, is one of 10 overseas players included in the squad. The Roses start their campaign against reigning Quad Series champions Australia on 26 August, before matches against New Zealand and South Africa. They conclude the tour with a three-match series against New Zealand. Tania Obst joins the England set-up as assistant coach with Colette Thomson supporting as the performance coach. Neville's side were narrowly beaten by world number one side Australia in the Quad Series back in February as the Diamonds retained their title with three wins from three matches. England, ranked third in the world, had won their opener against South Africa in extra-time, before being beaten comprehensively by New Zealand in Liverpool. England squad in full: Ama Agbeze (captain), Jade Clarke (vice-captain), Joanne Harten (vice-captain), Sara Bayman, Eboni Beckford-Chambers, Eleanor Cardwell, Beth Cobden, Kadeen Corbin, Stacey Francis, Jodie Gibson, Serena Guthrie, Helen Housby, Geva Mentor, Chelsea Pitman. Reserves: Summer Artman, Sasha Corbin, George Fisher, Natalie Haythornthwaite England v New Zealand tour dates: Thursday, 7 September: New Zealand v England, Porirua, 08:45 BST Sunday, 10 September: New Zealand v England, Napier, 03:00 BST Wednesday, 13 September: New Zealand v England, Hamilton, 08:30 BST Aslef and RMT members are due to walk out for six days from 9 January. The Confederation of Passenger Transport (CPT) said bus operators from Cornwall to Northumberland were ready to send vehicles to the South East. Southern said it was still deciding what services might be offered. A CPT spokeswoman said: "We have had a very good response from quite a few members." It has sent Southern's parent company, the Go-Ahead Group, a list of operators including family-run firms which are ready to provide buses. Southern said it planned to announce on Wednesday what rail replacement services might be offered "to some commuters" but warned there would be no trains at all during the strike. Three weeks ago the government said officials were liaising with CPT "to determine how bus and coach operators can best assist with providing alternative transport". BBC South East understands the Army was asked before Christmas to prepare contingency plans for soldiers to drive buses. "Informal" talks between Southern and Aslef ended at ACAS today without agreement. A commuter group in east Surrey has written to the prime minister to "find out what is wrong and create a solution" to the long-running dispute about drivers, rather than conductors, operating carriage doors. It said passengers were "suffering daily, fainting or crying on trains, having health problems, receiving extreme mental anxiety and finding their financial position at high risk". The government said it would respond to the group shortly. Train fares rise by an average of 2.3% The politics behind the Southern rail dispute What's the Southern Rail strike about? How bad have Southern rail services got?
Ama Agbeze will once again captain England in the Quad Series, with head coach Tracey Neville naming a full-strength squad. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Dozens of bus and coach companies across England have offered vehicles for rail replacement services during the next Southern train drivers' strike.
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The holders' title hopes were already over after a draw against Wales and defeats by France and England. But the Irish bounced back to crush a poor Italian side with a display of running rugby. "It was great to get the win on the board and to do it with a little bit of room to spare," said the Ireland coach. "We were probably afforded a bit more space than we had in recent weeks and that allowed us to open the game up." Media playback is not supported on this device Ireland's enterprising display was best exemplified by Jamie Heaslip's try just before the break after a delightful sweeping move, with Simon Zebo, Jared Payne, Johnny Sexton, Andrew Trimble and Fergus McFadden all involved. "It's great to see that when you're afford the opportunity to play like that," said Schmidt of the Heaslip score, which extended Ireland's half-time lead to 25-3. "That's exactly how you want to play. We've been squeezed for time and space by the teams we've faced so far and no doubt Scotland will squeeze us next week. "We'll try to deliver the very best we can next week. And hopefully it will contain a little bit of open rugby, as there was today - and even as there was in the second half against England and the last time we were here against Wales. "Today showed we haven't been that far away in the last few games and when the pressure valve broke, it was great to see some good scores coming out." Skipper Rory Best said the Irish had cut out "a lot of the silly things we have been doing to date in the Championship". "From the off, you could see the intensity and pace that we wanted to play at," said the Ulsterman. "We know it's all about doing the simple things well. There's no secret to it. "We just were better at keeping the ball and clearing the rucks and, ultimately, we were better in their 22, which is something we've been working hard at." A downcast Italy captain Sergio Parisse described his team's display as "terrible" after their fourth straight defeat in this year's Championship. "The score is really, really hard but we deserved this score," said the number eight. "We played a really, really poor match. Ireland played at a good level. We let them play with a lot of speed and that's hard to defend against." The Italians now face the difficult task of attempting to regroup for a trip to Cardiff next Saturday as the wooden spoon looms. "At this level, we have a lot of things to do to become competitive," acknowledged the Stade Francais star.
Ireland coach Joe Schmidt was content as his side broke out of their Six Nations shackles to notch nine tries in a 58-15 hammering of Italy in Dublin.
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Asked if he would work at the theatre, Rylance said "no, probably not". The oil giant is not "behaving ethically given the dangerous increase of climate change", Rylance told BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House. BP says it is "proud to have supported UK arts and culture for over 50 years". But Rylance accused the oil giant of trying to present itself as a "society-loving organisation, which I don't think they are". Rylance, who is an associate artist at the RSC, says artists are "being used to whitewash" the energy company. In July 2016, BP pledged £7.5m over five years to the Royal Opera House, British Museum, National Portrait Gallery and Royal Shakespeare Company from 2018. The RSC says sponsorship is an important part of its "diverse funding mix" and helps it "reach the widest possible audience". "BP is a publicly listed company," says Peter Mather, BP head of UK. "We balance our responsibilities to our employees, shareholders and the communities in which we operate." The chief executive of the Royal Opera House, Alex Beard, said cultural institutions such as his relied on a "mixed economy". A "three-legged stool" of box office receipts, philanthropic donations and corporate support "allows us to have a sufficient mix of funding that we can take our own decisions about what is right for our art and for our audiences", he said. Without the support of corporate sponsors, "we would frankly be diminished", he added. Arts publicist Mark Borkowski said as funding from government decreases, "we're going to have to move to a more aggressive American model" of relying on private and corporate support. "Ethically the pure argument of Mark Rylance's point of view is valid," he said. "I am sure that certain people will possibly boycott a show because they have seen a specific logo. But make no mistake if it is a top ticket or a hot show, people's ethics are left at home." Rylance says it is for audiences and artists to decide. "If there was someone round here selling revolvers in my neighbourhood or knives to the young people and said I'd like to sponsor your theatrical show I'd say no." For more on this story listen to Broadcasting House at 09:00 BST on Sunday 23 October, or catch up on iPlayer. After a 22-hour journey to Baikonur in Kazakhstan, we had a 4am start. We were escorted into the cosmodrome, a collection of scruffy, space buildings in the desert. Then the hangar door opened, revealing the huge, red booster rockets looming in dark. The sun started to rise, and it was like a curtain had lifted, showing the incredible vast landscape of the desert steppe with the Space rocket crawling through it. We filmed the astronauts as they emerged in their spacesuits in the dark, holding the Olympic torch. They climbed onto the same bus that Yuri Gagarin used on the day he became the first man to launch into space. Then, with every cameraman looking for the perfect spot, there was a last dash to the platform overlooking the launch pad. The Soyuz rocket stood glistening in the sunrise. Fifteen minutes before launch, I had two cameras set up. One for the live position and my main camera for our correspondent. One minute to go Daniel Sandford stepped in front of the main camera and we had one last rehearsal. This "piece to camera" had to be a "one-take wonder" with perfect timing. Blast off. I saw a huge amount of smoke and flames, but there was no sound. We were 1 km away. The rocket started to move. Boom! The sound had finally reached us, and Daniel started talking. I zoomed out to bring him into the picture. The rocket was moving fast out of shot so I panned up off Daniel, chasing the flaming rocket up into the blue sky. A perfect take. That was what we came for. In less than a minute, the rocket was just a burning speck. The torch, strapped inside the capsule on top of the rocket was heading out of the atmosphere.
Mark Rylance says he is unlikely to perform at the Royal Shakespeare Company unless it drops a sponsorship deal with BP. [NEXT_CONCEPT] I have been a camerawoman for 10 years, but the chance to film a rocket going into space was a once in a lifetime opportunity.
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Joe Sheppherd, from Cornwall, died at Creamfields in Cheshire at the weekend. His employer JDM garage at Holsworthy, Devon, said it was with "heartfelt sadness" that "our friend, colleague and employee Joe has passed away". "Our thoughts are with Joe's family at this difficult time," it said on Facebook. Police are treating Mr Sheppard's death as unexplained. A post-mortem examination is due to take place on Wednesday. Rainwater poured into the venue ahead of Saturday's performance of The Crucible. Aberdeen Performing Arts (APA) said heavy rain combined with ongoing roof repairs led to the issue. Customers received a refund and APA said no lasting damage had been caused to the venue. A spokeswoman said: "Due to persistent heavy rain and ongoing roof repairs, we experienced an issue with water entering the auditorium. "There was a lack of time to resolve this without causing a major delay to the beginning of the performance. "The show was cancelled and refunds have been issued. There is no lasting damage and future shows will go ahead as planned." It is the only machine known to have been personally sold by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, from a garage in California in 1976. Fewer than 50 Apple 1 computers are now believed to be in existence. Yet despite its rarity, the machine was sold at way below auction house Christie's estimate of $400,000-$600,000. In October, the Henry Ford organization paid $905,000 for one of the computers. The original Apple Computer - now referred to as the Apple 1 - was hand-made by Steve Wozniak, an engineer who co-founded Apple, with Jobs, in the 1970s. When new, the machines sold for $666.66. To finance the building of the machines, Jobs sold his VW van, while Wozniak sold a calculator for $500.
Tributes have been paid to a 26-year-old man who died at a dance music festival. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The operator of His Majesty's Theatre in Aberdeen has said it had no choice but to cancel a show just moments before it was due to start. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A fully operational Apple 1 computer has been sold at auction for $365,000 (£230,000).
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Craig Stormey, 30, was arrested on 29 November last year in the town of Neustift, in the Tyrol province, where he had been attending an army camp. Stormey, from Colchester Garrison, admitted entering the girl's unlocked family home while drunk and raping her, a court spokesman in Innsbruck said. An MoD spokesman said an application would be made to discharge the soldier. Stormey's lawyers said he planned to appeal against the sentence. The soldier had been found in the girl's bedroom, by her father who had been awoken by the noise, prosecutors in Austria said. Police arrested the man in front of the victim's house. "We can confirm that a British soldier has been convicted in Austria of the rape of a minor and assault of a state authority and sentenced to nine years' imprisonment," the MoD spokesman said. "In line with normal procedure when a soldier is sentenced to imprisonment, an application will be made for his discharge from the Army." Colchester Garrison would not confirm the soldier's name. "We are not prepared to release any personal information about this individual," a statement said. "We have a common law and Data Protection Act duty to protect the personal information of our employees and there is no good reason to release personal information in this case."
A British soldier has been sentenced to nine years in prison for raping a six-year-old girl in Austria.
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In her maiden speech, Linda Burney wore a traditional kangaroo-skin cloak with her personal totem, the white cockatoo, known as the noisy messenger bird. She lambasted calls for the Racial Discrimination Act to be watered down. She warned that indigenous Australians still suffered disproportionately high rates of poverty and ill-health. Usual protocol in the House of Representatives in Canberra was relaxed to allow a woman from Ms Burney's Wiradjuri clan to sing a welcome from the public gallery. Referring to her people, she promised to bring the Wiradjuri fighting spirit into federal parliament. "I was born at a time when the Australian government knew how how many sheep there were but not how many Aboriginal people," the former schoolteacher told the House. "I was 10 years old before the '67 referendum fixed that. The first decade of my life was spent as a non-citizen." Labor MP Ms Burney will represent the New South Wales seat of Barton. She said that calls by some senators to amend the Racial Discrimination Act showed a lack of sincerity that was "hurtful". Ms Burney is the daughter of a white mother and an Aboriginal father. She did not meet her father until she was 28 years old. Ms Burney made history in 2003 when she became the first indigenous MP elected to the parliament of New South Wales, Australia's most populous state. She said at the time that she hoped her election was part of a trend towards greater inclusion in Australian political life. Organisers said the smaller amount was because more transactions are being made privately due to the "changing nature of business deals". There were 11 announced deals, with another 40 made at undisclosed values. The airshow launched on Wednesday and opens to the public this weekend. "As the industry becomes more sophisticated and competitive, a growing proportion of the announcements and deals included undisclosed values," organiser Experia Events said in a statement. Experia's managing director Leck Chet Lam told the BBC earlier this week that they hoped to either exceed of achieve the same deal amount as 2014. In a statement today, he said "we are committed to creating carefully curated programme elements and are looking forward to delivering a 2018 edition that will further contribute to growing industry capabilities." The largest order was made by Philippines Airlines for 12 Airbus A350s worth $3.7bn, followed by a purchase by China's Okay Airways for a dozen Boeing 737s worth $1.3bn. Earlier today, Papua New Guinea's Air Niugini announced an order for four Boeing 737 MAX planes worth $440m. Japan's Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation also won a $940m order for 20 of its planes from US leasing company Aerolease. The biggest orders in recent years have been by low cost carriers, which have rapidly expanded their fleet sizes. In 2012, Indonesia's Lion Air ordered 380 Boeing planes in a deal worth more than $22bn while in 2014 Vietnam's VietJetAir ordered 100 Airbus aircrafts. The modest orders made during the three-day trade period partly reflect a drop in demand for new planes due to the weak global economy. But Rajiv Biswas, Asia Pacific Chief Economist at IHS Global Insight said the commercial aviation industry is actually "in a buoyant mood." "Many Asian airlines placed large orders between 2011 and 2014, and now have a long pipeline of aircraft deliveries to absorb over the next four years," he said. "Due to the existing capital expenditure commitments already made by many Asian airlines over the medium-term outlook, future new orders are expected to come in smaller sizes." Rising wealth in the regional is expected to continue to fuel growth in Asia Pacific air travel demand. Last year, the total number of domestic air passengers rose by 10.5%. Mr Biswas expects the aviation industry's profits to rise by about 9% each year because of the sharp fall in oil prices and strong regional growth in Asia Pacific passenger traffic. The next airshow will be held in February 2018. Organisers said about 70% of exhibitors have already made reservations to participate. 17 January 2016 Last updated at 10:48 GMT Visitors can walk around a glasshouse, spotting lots of different types of butterflies. BBC Reporter Tarah Welsh went to have a look for us.
The first Aboriginal woman elected to Australia's lower house of parliament has promised to bring the "fighting spirit of her clan" to political life. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The biannual Singapore Airshow, Asia's biggest aerospace and defence exhibition, saw trade deals fall to $12.7bn (£8.9bn) this year compared with public takings of $32bn in 2014. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A new butterfly display filled with hundreds of butterflies has opened in London.
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A third of 748 GPs in Wales surveyed by the British Medical Association (BMA) said they were thinking of quitting within that period. The Welsh government said it was "working hard" to attract GPs. Dr Phil White, from BMA in Wales, said a Welsh GP shortage was "inevitable". He told BBC Radio Cymru's Post Cyntaf programme: "We are facing a serious situation. We already have problems in areas such as Conwy and the Llyn Peninsula where you have one GP serving 5,000 patients". The proportion of Welsh GPs polled who said they were considering retirement in the next five years was on par with the rest of the UK. As part of the BMA survey of 15,000 doctors in the UK, 10% of Welsh GPs polled said their workload was manageable. A Welsh government spokesman said: "In this UK-wide survey around half of those who responded were over 50, compared to 41% in Wales, so the results may overstate GPs' intentions to retire. "There are now more than 2,000 GPs working in the Welsh NHS, an increase of 10.5% since 2004." Russia's athletics federation was this week provisionally suspended from international competition, including the Olympic Games, for its alleged involvement in widespread doping. Coe said action needed to be taken against Russia or there were "unlikely to be many tomorrows for athletics". "It was the toughest sanction we had," Coe wrote in the Sunday Telegraph. Media playback is not supported on this device The International Association of Athletics Federations council members voted 22-1 in favour of Russia being banned after the publication of an independent World Anti-Doping Agency report that alleged "state-sponsored doping". Coe, who became president of the sport's world governing body in August, said the crisis had been "a horror show" but accepts that the IAAF should have done more to stop doping. "The best way to protect clean athletes is to be unflinching in our commitment to them, and not just in words," added Coe. "We have to create structures that are always in their corner and here none of us come out very well - including my federation. "The architecture of anti-doping has failed them. Were the walls too high in many of our organisations to properly investigate abuses? Almost certainly 'yes' has to be our uncomfortable answer." Cafodd Heddlu Gogledd Cymru eu galw tua 20:30 nos Iau i leoliad yn ardal Bryn Heulog yn Hen Golwyn, ble gafwyd hyd i gorff David James Kingsbury, 35 oed o'r dref. Mae'r ddynes, sydd hefyd o'r ardal, yn cael ei chadw yn y ddalfa i gael ei chwestiynu gan yr heddlu. Mae'r crwner wedi cael ei hysbysu a dywedodd yr heddlu y bydd prawf post mortem yn cael ei gynnal ddydd Gwener. Dywedodd y Ditectif Brif Arolygydd, Andrew Williams: "Rwy'n apelio i unrhyw un wnaeth weld neu glywed dyn a dynes yn cweryla gyda'i gilydd, neu gydag unrhyw un arall, yn yr ardal."
A senior doctor has warned the Welsh GP system is at "breaking point" after a poll suggested 35% of GPs are considering retirement within five years. [NEXT_CONCEPT] IAAF president Lord Coe says athletics may not have a future if it does not eliminate doping. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Mae dynes wedi cael ei harestio ar amheuaeth o lofruddio ar ôl i gorff dyn gael ei ddarganfod yn Sir Conwy.
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The 22-year-old is back at the Super League champions after a one-year stay in the NRL, where he played for Sydney Roosters and South Sydney Rabbitohs. "It's not about putting one over on them (the NRL), it's just about proving we can keep up with them," he said. "We do get looked down on slightly, I found that over there as well." The England international told BBC Radio 5 live: "They don't watch it as much and stuff like that - whether it is because of the time difference I don't know. "You're representing the other Super League teams. Even St Helens, I'm sure they'll be wanting us to win just like we would for them. "We're all English teams and we want to stick together and get the win." Media playback is not supported on this device Since the introduction of the expanded World Club Series in 2015, Australian National Rugby League sides have won all six games between the two leagues. With questions about the future of the competition raised in the build-up, Wigan owner Ian Lenagan is looking at the bigger picture. "From Wigan's viewpoint, this is the only trophy we've not won in the last 10 years under my ownership," he told BBC Radio Manchester. "From a Super League viewpoint, I think it is critical that we stop the rot from the last six games that we've lost in the last two years. "For us to get our self respect and for us to get the respect of the NRL, I think we have to beat Cronulla." Warrington Wolves, who were beaten by Wigan in last season's Super League Grand Final, play Brisbane Broncos in the first match of the World Club Series on Saturday (20:00 GMT).
Wigan winger Joe Burgess has claimed even rivals St Helens will be backing them when they face Cronulla Sharks in the World Club Challenge on Sunday.
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Thomas Rees and Joshua Bradwell were in a Sainsbury's store in Hackney when the guard told them a woman had complained about their behaviour. "It's really knocked me for six and I've spent the last day or so analysing how I'm perceived," said Mr Rees. Sainsbury's apologised and offered them a £10 voucher. The 32-year-old said they were holding hands, and that he may have put his arm around his partner's waist as they were buying their food on Monday evening. "We weren't celebrating good news, we weren't all over each other, we weren't in the throes of passion - it was essentially just holding my boyfriend's hand as I do every day. I'm very much in love and that's how I express my love," he said. After they paid, a security guard told them about the complaint after he beckoned them outside so they would not be embarrassed, which "aggravated it more". "I have nothing to be embarrassed or ashamed about. I shouldn't be removed from the store," said Mr Rees. "All it's done is strengthen the importance that if you love someone, irrelevant of their gender, that is love and you should express that love in whatever way you desire or wish to. " Mr Rees tweeted the supermarket giant and got a message back apologising and offering the voucher. But he said he would like a phone call from them instead explaining how they train staff members to deal with diversity. He added: "I do feel for the security guard because he was clearly unable or poorly equipped to handle these situations. "He explained that he was brought up to believe 'live and let live' but he had to let us know that a complaint has been made and he kept repeating this complaint which was infuriating." A spokesperson for Sainsbury's said: "We sincerely apologise to Thomas and Josh. "We are an inclusive retailer and employer and do not tolerate discrimination in our stores. "We will take appropriate action once we've concluded our investigation with our security contractor." Jo Wales, 35, contacted BBC News to claim he was also victimised at a Sainsbury's store in Wimbledon when a cashier apparently refused to serve him and his male partner at Christmas and instead glared at them from two checkouts away. He wrote an email to the supermarket giant's CEO but did not hear back until about a month later, by which point he said he had moved on. Sainsbury's said it was unable to investigate this incident because it happened so long ago, but added it was not something which happened often. Two years ago, a "big kiss" protest was held at a Sainsbury's store in Brighton after a lesbian couple was asked to leave when one gave her partner a kiss on the cheek. Mr Bell travelled to China in his capacity as honorary vice president of the Confucius Institute at the Ulster University, the party said. A DUP spokesperson said that the trip had nothing to do with Mr Bell's role as enterprise minister. The party said the trip is not being funded out of the public purse. Under the DUP's "no business as usual policy", the Strangford MLA resumed his role as enterprise minister on Friday. He remained in post until one minute past midnight on Wednesday. The DUP said Mr Bell was in Beijing and is currently in Hubei Province visiting the institute's partner university. It added that Mr Bell was not travelling on departmental business and his flights were not paid for from public money. The DUP's other so-called revolving ministers - Simon Hamilton, Mervyn Storey and Michelle McIlveen - were re-appointed again on Wednesday and will remain in post until further notice. On Tuesday, the Sinn Féin MLA, Daithi McKay, told the Assembly that, while Mr Bell had been in post officially for four days, the Health Minister had not. He added: "I do not know what the priorities are within the DUP, but it is becoming increasingly clear that the Department of Health is not a number one priority. "There seem to be concerns that the Enterprise Minister needs to be in post to do his job and to sign off on certain things, but it is not as important that the Health Minister be in post."
A gay couple who held hands in a supermarket have expressed their anger after a security guard told them they were acting inappropriately. [NEXT_CONCEPT] DUP MLA Jonathan Bell travelled abroad this week, on what is being described as private business, before resigning as enterprise minister.
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Museum director Lonnie Bunch said it "has long represented a deplorable act of cowardice and depravity". It is the second noose found at a Smithsonian museum in four days. The looped rope is synonymous with the extrajudicial hangings, or lynchings, of mainly African-American people in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. Another noose was found hanging from a tree in the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden on Friday, steps away from the National Mall footpath which legions of tourists pass by each day. US Park Police are investigating the incidents. "Today's incident is a painful reminder of the challenges that African Americans continue to face", Mr Bunch wrote in an email to staff. "We will continue to help breach the chasm of race that has divided this nation since its inception," he added. The blast, which also wounded 180 others, ripped through a crowded market place in an ethnic Hazara area at around 18:00 (13:00) on Saturday. A Sunni extremist militant group has said it was behind the bombing. It is the second major attack on Quetta's 600,000-strong Hazara community in five weeks. A twin suicide bomb attack at a crowded snooker club on 10 January killed at least 92 people and wounded 121. By Imran AliBBC Afghan Stream After the last bomb attack in Quetta, and the ensuing protests by the Hazara community, the Pakistan government sacked Baluchistan's chief minister, Nawab Aslam Raisani, but has yet to arrest the culprits behind the attack. This came as no surprise to the Hazara community, who have yet to see the Pakistan government take action against the Sunni extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Many Hazaras feel the government is not doing enough and allows groups to act freely against Shia. With frequent targeted killings and bomb explosions in Quetta, the Hazaras are living in a state of fear. Many are apprehensive to leave their homes and those who work in areas that are deemed dangerous are told by their employers to stay at home. The banned Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed responsibility for the January attacks; and has reportedly claimed responsibility for this latest bombing. The bomb went off in a market area housing grocery stores, vegetable shops, language schools and a computer centre. It happened as people, mainly women, were shopping for groceries and children were coming out of their classes. The district is dominated by ethnic Hazaras, who mostly belong to Pakistan's Shia minority. Quetta police chief Mir Zubai Mehmood told the media that some 70kg to 80kg explosives had been planted inside a water tank that had been installed on a tractor trailer. The blast brought down nearby buildings, and police said they feared some people remain trapped under the rubble. Victims were rushed to hospitals in the area, and some were flown to hospitals in the southern city of Karachi, police said. "I saw many bodies of women and children," an eyewitness at a hospital told Reuters. "At least a dozen people were burned to death by the blast." Angry crowds are reported to have gathered in the area immediately following the blast, pelting police and initially refusing to let them and rescue workers reach the scene of the blast. The police raised the number of casualties several times through the day. Quetta is the capital of Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, and has been plagued by a separatist rebellion as well as sectarian violence. The city's minority Shia community have been angered by what they say is a lack of protection for them against sectarian attacks by Pakistani Sunni militants. Hundreds of Shia Hazaras in Quetta have been killed in such attacks over the last several years. Following the attacks on 10 January, families of the victims refused to bury their dead until they received assurances of security from the authorities. Following talks with Shia representatives from Quetta, Pakistan's Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf sacked Balochistan's chief minister and promised them better security. In the past Shia leaders and human rights campaigners have accused Pakistan's government of incompetence or collusion, the BBC's Orla Guerin reports from Islamabad.
Police are investigating after a noose was found in an exhibit on racial segregation at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. [NEXT_CONCEPT] At least 79 people are now said to have been killed in a bomb attack in a predominantly Shia Muslim part of the south-western Pakistani city of Quetta.
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The Experian study also found that the Broadland area of Norfolk has high levels of long-term unemployment. Because it is made of a large number of smaller firms it has a lower reliance on government contracts. The research was carried out to look at how resilient England's 324 council areas are to economic shocks. Because of Broadland's number of small businesses, it should not be hit too hard by any cuts in public sector spending, the chamber of commerce said. Caroline Williams, chief executive of the Norfolk Chamber of Commerce, said that although it was true Great Yarmouth had its problems, it also had great opportunities in growing its renewable energy sector. She said the county was in a good position to cope with cuts in public spending. "Because we have a large number of small businesses which don't have large government contracts, we'll probably be effected slightly less than other areas," she said. A special BBC News season examining the approaching cuts to public sector spending Spending Review: The Look East Debate Spending Review: Making It Clear But the problem faced by the county was to "convince the government to support growth" in the county. Ms Williams said a key issue in the county was the need for high-speed broadband to help businesses compete on an international level. Alison Thomas, cabinet member for children's services at Norfolk County Council, said the county was working to improve standards. "We have been working closely with Norfolk's schools, sixth forms and colleges to help raise attainment and aspirations in the Great Yarmouth area," she said. "In Great Yarmouth, performance at GCSE is close to the national average and has been improving at a faster rate than nationally over the last four years. "The proportion of young people gaining five A* to C, including English and maths has risen at double the rate it has nationally, improving by eight percentage points in Yarmouth and four across the rest of the country. "We also have very strong sixth form and college provision in the area, which is crucial in raising skills and qualifications." On BBC Radio Norfolk from 0900 BST on Friday, Nick Conrad will be hosting a debate on the State of the Region.
Great Yarmouth has one of the lowest proportions of highly qualified workers in England and very low earnings, research for the BBC has found.
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The call from Jenny Rathbone follows research that showed more than a third of Welsh schools have banned pupils from bringing them to school. A body representing energy drinks manufacturers said it was "draconian" and not supported by evidence. The Welsh Government said it was "fully aware" of health concerns and would explore ways of looking at the issue. The sale of the drinks - high in caffeine and frequently high in sugar - has been banned in schools since 2007. Slightly fewer than half of Welsh secondary schools responded to a survey by BBC Radio Wales' Eye on Wales programme. Sixty nine said they had gone further and confiscated the drinks over concerns they can affect pupils' behaviour and educational attainment. Latvia and Lithuania banned the sale of energy drinks to under 18s and Ms Rathbone wants the Welsh Government to explore introducing similar laws, using its powers to legislate on child protection. "I think it should be around controlling the sale of these goods to children under the age of 16 at least, I would prefer 18," the Cardiff Central AM said. The European Food Safety Authority has estimated about two thirds of 10 to 18-year-olds regularly consume energy drinks - even though they are not recommended for those under the age of 16. The British Soft Drinks Association - which represents the majority of the UK's energy drink manufacturers - is opposed to legislation that would place age restrictions on their purchase. Its director general, Gavin Partington, argued that such a "draconian ban" would not be justified by the evidence and would remove consumer and parental choice. A spokesman for the Welsh Government said that it was "fully aware" of the health concerns surrounding energy drinks, especially for young people. He added that a letter had been sent to the UK's food standards agency asking it to "explore further opportunities" to send appropriate messages to consumers.
A ban on selling high-caffeine energy drinks to children should be brought in, a Labour AM has said.
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The swimmers dived into the chilly water at the Marine Lake in Clevedon in support of the Secret World animal sanctuary in Somerset. Last year, organisers said the event raised more than £500 and this year they are hoping for more. The charity swim has been taking place for the past 20 years. About 2,000 spectators watched the event.
Dozens of people, many dressed as animals, have taken part in an annual New Year's Day charity swim at a seaside lake near Bristol.
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The government has unveiled plans for a 1.8-mile (2.9km) tunnel past the World Heritage Site. It said this would transform the A303, cutting congestion and improving journey times. The CBA said it backed the tunnel but lengthening it could help avoid damaging key views of the monument. CBA director Mike Hepworth said he was keen to engage with Highways England to find a solution as the proposed western tunnel entrance was close to some significant burial sites. "Just moving the western end by three or four hundred metres would make a huge difference to not damaging the key views and relationships which are important to understanding the landscape," he said. "This is one of the most significant monuments in the world and we have a responsibility to maintain it for future generations." The busy A303 in Wiltshire currently passes within a few hundred metres of the prehistoric monument. The tunnel forms part of a £2bn government scheme to upgrade all remaining sections of the road between the M3 and M5. A public consultation of the tunnel plan runs until 5 March.
A proposed road tunnel past Stonehenge should be made longer with better designed entrances, the Council for British Archaeology (CBA) has said.
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Officers from North East Counter Terrorism Unit and the Wales Extremism and Counter Terrorism Unit executed six search warrants on Thursday. The men, aged 19-32, were arrested under section 12 of the act, creating offences in relation to the support of proscribed organisations. Two of the men have been named as Rofi Islam and Sajid Idris. The arrests are not linked to two men charged with offences on Wednesday. Police said the arrests were linked to the Grangetown area of Cardiff and were part of a wider counter-terrorism investigation in Wales, but are not linked to brothers Aseel and Nasser Muthana who went to fight with IS in Syria. South Wales Police Assistant Chief Constable Nikki Holland denied Cardiff was a hotbed of terrorism. She said the Muthana brothers and Reyaad Khan had become poster boys in the UK for IS but said police were determined to tackle radicalisation. "The scale of counter terrorism in Wales is minimal compared to other parts of the UK," she added. Ramesh Rupaliyah, who works in a shop in Kent Street in Grangetown, said there were a number of police vehicles there at 07:00 GMT when the store opened. "Police were already there when I got here," he said "there were police vehicles in the street." Conservative Craig Whittaker's tweet linked to an article by Daily Mail columnist Richard Littlejohn entitled "Trust Labour? I'd rather trust Jimmy Savile to babysit". Mr Whittaker, who is standing in Calder Valley, West Yorkshire, is currently chairman of the Parliamentary Group for Children in Care. He declined to comment when approached. Mr Whittaker, who also served as Calderdale Council's cabinet member for children and young people from 2007 to 2010, sparked an angry response to the tweet. One, †A collection of four silver $2 coins costs NZ$469 (£240) while silver-plated $1 coins cost NZ$23.50 (£12) each. All Niueans are New Zealand citizens and Queen Elizabeth II, who appears on the reverse of coins, is head of state. Coin-issuer New Zealand Mint said they were gift products and would not be used "to go buy an ice cream with". The first 10 silver-plated Star Wars coins will be available in November with a further 30 to be issued in the future. A maximum of 50,000 copies of each silver-plated coin will be produced. No more than 7,500 of each of the silver coins - which contain 1oz of the precious metal - will be produced. In April, Niue premier Toke Talagi defended stamps celebrating the marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton which featured a perforated line that split the couple.
Five men have been arrested under the Terrorism Act following raids in Cardiff and Barry. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A prospective parliamentary candidate has come under fire for sharing a joke about Jimmy Savile on Twitter. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia and Yoda are among Star Wars characters who will appear on coins that will be legal tender in the Pacific island of Niue.
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Martin Peat played a leading role in awarding the Cambridgeshire contract to provide care for older and disabled people - which collapsed after eight months - to UnitingCare in 2014. His own consultancy company had folded in 2012, owing the taxman £40,000. Mr Peat, who started a second company which was also wound up last year, declined to comment. He had been the senior consultant working on the tender of the UnitingCare project on behalf of NHS business consultants, the Strategic Projects Team (SPT). The SPT was paid nearly £300,000 for its advice on the project. As its commercial director, Mr Peat worked on a number of projects across the health service between 2009 and 2015. His firm - Martin Peat Consulting Limited - was formed in September 2004. In March 2012, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) successfully petitioned the High Court to wind up the company and it went into liquidation. A month earlier, he had formed a second company, MP Health Projects, but by June 2014, that firm was already in financial difficulty. Last October, HMRC applied for MP Health Projects to be wound-up - a process completed by December. Business consultants The Strategic Projects Team was axed last year after criticism from NHS England and the National Audit Office, partly due to its involvement in the UnitingCare scheme. It had been linked to a series of failed multimillion-pound NHS deals, including the Hinchingbrooke Hospital franchise, Weston Hospital in Weston-Super-Mare and the East of England pathology network. The SPT boasted of delivering over £6bn of major projects and had success with the NHS Friends and Family Test, a patient ratings system aimed at improving nursing care. Former SPT managing director Andrew MacPherson said his team "had no knowledge of Martin's personal relationship with HMRC and he has not been banned from trading". He added Mr Peat was "originally employed by the Strategic Health Authority on the recommendation of the Department of Health, based on long standing successful support to the NHS". Mr Peat said all matters relating to the contract should be addressed to the NHS, adding it no longer employed him "in any capacity". He added: "On the other matters raised I have no statement to make." A spokesman for NHS England said Mr Peat had not led the SPT or the UnitingCare contract. He said: "The SPT role in the contract was restricted to the process of procurement; the relevant clinical commissioning groups led the contract." He added that NHS England had not been established in April 2013 and therefore had no involvement in the creation or composition of the SPT. You can see the full story on Inside Out East at 19:30 GMT on BBC One on Monday 20 March or via iPlayer afterwards.
A senior adviser on a failed £800m NHS outsourcing contract had previously seen his own company go bust.
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Media playback is not supported on this device The fifth-tier club became the first non-league team in 103 years to reach the last eight with the biggest shock of the competition so far on Saturday. Holders Manchester United play Chelsea, and Millwall, who beat Premier League champions Leicester, play Tottenham. Middlesbrough face Manchester City or Huddersfield, who drew 0-0 on Saturday. "It's a win-win," Lincoln manager Danny Cowley said on BT Sport. "We wish Sutton all the best tomorrow, I genuinely hope they can do it." Sutton, who are the lowest-ranked team still left in the cup, play at home to the Gunners in a 19:55 GMT kick-off on Monday that will be live on BBC One. The replay between Manchester City and Huddersfield is provisionally set for Tuesday, 28 February at Etihad Stadium. Full FA Cup quarter-final draw: Media playback is not supported on this device There are 88 places between National League leaders Lincoln and Arsenal. Sutton are in the same league as the Imps but are in 17th - 104 places below the Gunners. Lincoln boss Cowley said his side had achieved a "football miracle" after beating Burnley 1-0 at Turf Moor with an 89th-minute winner. It is the first time in the club's 133-year history that they have reached the quarter-finals. Their next match is away to North Ferriby United on Tuesday, while they are also still in the FA Trophy and play Boreham Wood for a semi-final place on Saturday. Queens Park Rangers, who joined the Football League in 1920, were the last non-league team to make the FA Cup last eight, in 1914. They were beaten 2-1 by Liverpool in their quarter-final at Anfield.
Lincoln City will play Sutton or Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-finals as reward for their stunning fifth-round victory over Burnley.
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Llanelli Joint Venture, a partnership between the Welsh Government and Carmarthenshire council, is advertising 2.8 acres (1.1 hectares) of land at Burry Port Harbour. It comes with planning consent for mixed-use developments. They include two housing development sites, as well as opportunities for shops, a restaurant, pub and hotel. Carmarthenshire council leader, Emlyn Dole, said the development would "create an exciting new waterfront area for the town". "The project has an emphasis on design quality and sustainability which will set a standard for other future developments to meet", he said.
A harbour-side site has been offered for sale in Carmarthenshire to encourage regeneration in the area.
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The Chiefs came into the game needing a bonus point-win to have any chance of a place in the quarter-finals. But they were left facing an uphill task when they conceded a try after only three minutes as Benjamin Kayser crashed over. The French Top 14 leaders went on to dominate, scoring seven tries. Their 26-point total in winning Pool Five means they are the leading team in the last eight, which they have now reached for the fifth time in the last six years. Noa Nakaitaci added to Kayser's early effort and Morgan Parra converted both and scored a penalty to leave the home side in control after just 23 minutes. Worse was to come for Exeter when first Olly Woodburn received a yellow card and conceded a penalty try while trying to stop a Clermont break and then Olly Devoto followed him to the sin-bin. The home side took advantage of the extra numbers with Wesley Fofana and former European player of the year Nick Abendanon both crossing for tries. However, France centre Fofana had to be replaced before half-time and was later diagnosed with a ruptured Achilles tendon that will rule him out of the Six Nations. James Short put the Chiefs on the board at the start of the second half but Clermont responded quickly with tries from Peceli Yato and Alex Lapandry. Exeter did however find some more momentum as the second half progressed, with Devoto, Woodburn and Michele Campagnaro giving a more respectable look to the score. Exeter director of Rugby Rob Baxter: "I don't see why we can't win this competition one day. We are still a relatively young side and you have to go through these things when you are developing. "This is a good kick in the pants for us, when Clermont beat us at home it turned out to be positive for us because it made us challenge ourselves." Clermont Auvergne: Spedding, Nakaitaci, Lamerat, Fofana, Abendanon, Lopez, Parra, Chaume, Kayser, Jarvis, Iturria, Vahaamahina, Yato, Lapandry, Lee. Replacements: Ulugia, Debaty, Zirakashvili, Jedrasiak, Chouly, Radosavljevic, Rougerie, Raka. Exeter: Dollman, Woodburn, Campagnaro, Devoto, Short, Steenson, Maunder, Moon, Yeandle, Francis, Atkins, J. Hill, Armand, Horstmann, Waldrom. Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, Low, Williams, Welch, Johnson, Townsend, Whitten, J. Simmonds. Referee: Andrew Brace (Ireland) For the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter. Aniso Abdulkadir was waiting for a train at Baker Street on Friday night when she was set upon. She later tweeted a picture of her alleged attacker and urged others to share the image. British Transport Police confirmed the incident was being investigated. Ms Abdulkadi tweeted: "This man at Baker Street station forcefully attempted to pull my hijab off and when I instinctively grabbed hold of my scarf he hit me." She added: "He proceeded to verbally abuse my friends and I, pinning one of them against the wall and spitting in her face." Her post has so far been retweeted by more than 24,000 times. A British Transport Police spokesman said it was being investigated as a hate crime, adding: "Behaviour like this is totally unacceptable and will not be tolerated. "This incident has been reported to us and we're investigating."
Exeter were knocked out of the European Champions Cup as Clermont Auvergne secured a home tie and top seeding for the last eight with an emphatic win. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Police are investigating a suspected hate crime after a man tried to pull off a Muslim woman's hijab at a Tube station and spat at her friend.
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The violence broke out in the Guangxi region on Sunday when one wedding procession tried to pass under an archway built for the other family. Images showed relatives and guests fighting with knives and improvised explosives made out of fireworks. Police arrived and made several arrests. There were no casualties. Local reports said the incident began when the processions for the Lin and Qi families met and both sides refused to give way to each other. Both sides also felt that the fact that they were holding their wedding celebrations at the same time on the same narrow road was "inauspicious". The violence kicked off when the Qis proceeded down the road where the Lins had already constructed their decorative archway. Amateur footage taken at the scene and shared online showed a large group of people gathered by the archway shouting angrily, and people shooting what appeared to be fireworks on the street at one another as others in the background flee. It remains unclear whether either couple actually managed to get married. But Foreign Minister Tobias Ellwood warned the death toll was likely to rise. He said it was "the most significant terrorist attack on the British people" since the London 7/7 bombing in 2005. A Tunisian student linked to Islamic State (IS) carried out the gun attack in Sousse which killed 38.
A feud between rival families holding weddings on the same day in a southern Chinese village erupted into a four-hour street battle, report local media. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Fifteen Britons have died following the attack on a Tunisian beach resort, the Foreign Office has confirmed.
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A gunman opened fire on a crowd watching an English Premier League game near the town of Juba. South Sudan's National Courier newspaper said the gunman had escaped despite a "prompt response" from security forces. Police are investigating, but have not yet identified a motive. The incident took place in Gure, a suburb of Juba, the South Sudan capital. The city was hit by violence earlier this year as rival political factions clashed, prompting the vice-president, Riek Machar, to flee the country. The Local Government Association (LGA) said such products posed a fire risk, hurt legitimate businesses and cost the UK about £3bn a year in unpaid duty. In some cases these cigarettes contained human excrement, dead flies and asbestos, the LGA added. Councils have carried out a series of raids to target the illicit trade. Hundreds of thousands of illegal cigarettes have been seized in Wolverhampton, Bristol and Nottingham, and sniffer dogs were used to search 12 locations in Birmingham. Southwark, Bexley, Bromley, Greenwich, Lambeth and Lewisham councils in south London have joined forces to tackle the trade in the estimated 114 million illicit cigarettes sold across their areas each year. Trading standards officers have found fake cigarettes hidden inside vacuum cleaners, under floorboards and in toilet cisterns. Many feature much higher levels of toxic ingredients such as tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide, lead, cadmium and arsenic than normal cigarettes. They also may not have safety precautions that ensure genuine cigarettes put themselves out if they are not smoked, thus reducing the risk of accidental fires. Joanna Spicer, vice-chairwoman of the LGA's safer and stronger communities board, said: "Counterfeit tobacco being sold cheaply through the black market by rogue traders is hampering council efforts to reduce smoking. "This illicit trade is also funding organised criminal gangs, damaging the livelihoods of honest businesses and costing taxpayers billions of pounds a year. "People buying cheap cigarettes might think they are getting a great deal - but the truth is that they're not. If they knew what they might contain, they might think twice about buying them. "Council prosecutions should serve as a strong warning to any shopkeeper thinking of stocking their shelves with illegal tobacco and not thinking twice about selling them cheaply to children and others."
At least 11 people are dead and 16 others have been injured after an attack on football fans in South Sudan, local media report. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Attempts to cut the amount people smoke are being hit by a black market trade in millions of illegal cigarettes, council bosses have warned.
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Wales face Ireland in the last four on Sunday when a win would guarantee either nation a place in the next round of the World League in June. Joanne Westwood had put Wales ahead in the first half before Symbat Sabazova equalised for Kazakhstan from a penalty corner. Ireland beat Singapore 10-0 to reach the semi-finals. Wales have never reached this stage of the Hockey World League before. Advancing to the next stage in June would give them an opportunity to qualify for the 2018 World Cup. The striker was booked twice for simulation in Thursday's 0-0 draw with Hamilton Academical at Tannadice. But his appeal will not be heard until next Thursday, meaning the 25-year-old will not be suspended on Sunday. Murray appeared to be fouled in the penalty box by Scott McMann before falling with 13 minutes remaining. Confirming their appeal, United said in a club statement that they had "subsequently received notification from the Scottish FA that Simon will be available to play in Sunday's second leg". Immediately after the match, United manager Ray McKinnon had said: "I can only say I'm very disappointed with the penalty decision. Media playback is not supported on this device "At the time, we thought it was a penalty. We've seen it back now and it's obviously been confirmed there was a penalty." Referee Steven McLean appeared to receive guidance from his assistant before showing United's top scorer a second yellow. "The referee, Steven, he's made a really poor decision," said McKinnon. "I don't think he's had any help from his linesman there at all. It's very clear-cut. "All you can ask for in big games like this and good referees like Steven is to get the big decisions right because that could've really impacted on us, totally. "We were down to 10 men. Effectively, we could've had a penalty to go 1-0 up, so the whole tie would've been different." Murray had scored in all four play-off games ahead of Thursday's goal-less draw and McKinnon was determined to make sure he played at Hamilton. "I think that's absolutely crucial because there'd be an injustice if he wasn't able to play in the game on Sunday for us," said the manager, whose side are chasing promotion after one season in the Championship Hamilton manager Martin Canning, whose side are looking to avoid relegation, said he "didn't see" the McMann challenge on Murray. "If we go and take our chances in the first half - we had two or three real good opportunities - it could be irrelevant," said Canning. "There's no goals, but there's people hobbling about at the end of the game for us, obviously a sending off for them. "Now, it's going to be a difficult second leg - one we need to make sure we compete in." Accies will be without suspended captain Mikey Devlin, who missed the first leg through injury, and midfielder Darian MacKinnon, who is also banned for the second leg. Veteran midfielder Massimo Donati and winger Dougie Imrie also ended the game with injuries. "We'll need to assess the injuries," added Canning. "We've got Darian definitely out and now we've got Massimo and Dougie potentials, so we need to wait and see."
A late Leah Wilkinson goal gave Wales a 2-1 Hockey World League quarter-final win over Kazakhstan in Kuala Lumpur. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Simon Murray is free to play in the Premiership play-off final second leg after Dundee United appealed against his second yellow card in the first.
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The former EastEnders star will play DCI Sacha Millard, the new boss of the Unsolved Crime and Open Case Squad (UCOS). Outhwaite will appear in the final two episodes of the 10th series, following Redman's departure in episode eight. The drama, which has been running since 2003, will return to BBC One later this year. Outhwaite will appear alongside regular cast members Dennis Waterman and Denis Lawson in the popular crime series. "I'm delighted to be joining the cast at such an exciting time," said the actress, who made a guest appearance in another role on the show's ninth series. "I've been a huge fan of the show for years and can't wait to be working with the amazing cast and crew." Only Fools and Horses star Nicholas Lyndhurst will also join the show when it begins its latest run.
Tamzin Outhwaite is to join the cast of BBC crime drama New Tricks following the departure of Amanda Redman.
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Both have 12 months to run on their contracts and Posh routinely make all such players available. Lee Angol, Jordan Nicholson, Jerome Binnom-Williams, Hayden White and Luke James also fall under that category. However, forwards Adil Nabi and Shaquile Coulthirst, midfielder Brad Inman and defender Michael Smith have all been told to find new clubs. Loanees Craig Mackail-Smith and Luke McGee have returned to their parent clubs. Bostwick has made 228 appearances for Posh since his 2012 move from Stevenage, while boss Grant McCann recently described Maddison as "on his day, one of the best in this league, if not the best". However, both could be sold if they do not agree new deals, with Peterborough reluctant to allow them to leave for free. After the season-ending defeat at Bolton on Sunday, McCann threatened major changes to his squad after they finished 11th in League One. "There'll be quite a few going on the transfer list," he told BBC Radio Cambridgeshire. "I think we need to make it very clear now that mediocrity doesn't sit with me very nicely. "I'm disappointed, when probably I shouldn't be in my first year as a manager, to finish where we are in the league. "I'm a born winner. I thought I had the right people in the changing room - obviously I didn't. But I definitely will next year. "[We need] people who have got that bit more drive and determination. We haven't had it and it's definitely something we need to have a look at." Nigeria's then-military regime sparked global outrage after convicting Mr Saro-Wiwa of murder and hanging him. The West African state's main human rights body said his trial was "deeply flawed", and he should be pardoned. Mr Saro-Wiwa led mass protests against oil pollution in Nigeria's Ogoniland. The protests were seen as a major threat to then-military ruler Gen Sani Abacha, and oil giant Shell. Military rule ended in Nigeria, Africa's most populous state and biggest oil producer, in 1999. The head of the government-appointed Nigerian Human Rights Commission Chidi Odinkalu said there was no doubt Ken Saro-Wiwa's trial was "deeply flawed" and "unsafe". A posthumous pardon was the only way to restore the integrity of the state which "breached its own laws to procure a killing", he added, the AFP news agency reports. The main events to commemorate Mr Saro-Wiwa's death - including a "justice walk" - are taking place in the main oil city, Port Harcourt, reports the BBC's Chris Ewokor from the capital, Abuja. Nigeria's port authorities have refused to release a metal bus, shipped from the UK, which was to have been part of the commemorations because they regarded its message as highly political, our reporter adds. It had written on it Mr Saro-Wiwa's famous phrase: "I accuse the oil companies of committing genocide." Suzanne Dhaliwal from campaign group Action Soro-Wiwa condemned the seizure of the bus. "We are still seeing the same attitudes to the freedom of expression that were there 20 years ago," she told the BBC's Newsday programme. The bus is an artwork of UK-based Nigerian artist Sokari Douglas Camp, and was done about a decade ago. It was commissioned by campaign groups, including Platform, to show solidarity with Nigerians who are still affected by oil pollution. Last week, Amnesty International and the Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development accused Shell of making false claims about the extent of its clean-up operations in Nigeria. In a report, they said several sites Shell claimed to have had cleaned up were still polluted. Shell said that it disagreed with their findings. Mr Saro-Wiwa and eight other activists were hanged after a secret trial which saw them being convicted of murdering four traditional leaders. They denied the charge, and said they were framed. The executions led to Nigeria's temporary suspension from the Commonwealth.
Peterborough have transfer-listed 11 players, including midfielders Michael Bostwick and Marcus Maddison. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Supporters of renowned Nigerian environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa have called for him to be posthumously pardoned, as they mark the 20th anniversary of his execution.
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Snowdonia Pumped Hydro (SPH) has applied to Gwynedd council for its Glyn Rhonwy pumped hydro storage project. One concern opponents of the scheme had was the possibility of pylons or overhead wires spoiling the landscape. SPH said there would be neither between the plant and the grid connection at Pentir, 4.9 miles (8km) away. The company said the trench would be built primarily on the verges of roads and would take about 12 months to dig and lay the cable. SPH managing director Dave Holmes said he believed "economic rejuvenation and high value jobs can co-exist alongside a commitment to conserve the natural beauty of the Llanberis area". The project sparked controversy earlier this year when opponents disputed claims the site may have been contaminated by chemicals used in World War Two bombs which were stored nearby. Developers have said, when operational, the plant would support up to 30 full-time jobs and operate for at least 125 years. The 29-year-old struggled for three years with a chronic bowel problem and returned after nearly 12 months out in Sunday's 3-0 win at Aston Villa. "I want to help us win to bring back the success we are used to," he said. "At least if they are winning you enjoy the moments. It is a lot more difficult when we are not." United have endured a tough start to the Premier League season under new manager David Moyes, but the win over Villa has moved them up to eighth and 10 points off leaders Arsenal. "We need to go on a winning run and put ourselves in a position where people are saying we are still there," added Fletcher, who came through the youth ranks at Old Trafford. Fletcher was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis in December 2011 but made 13 appearances for club and country in 2012-13, the last as an 89th-minute substitute in the 4-3 victory over Newcastle on 26 December, before the problem flared up again. The Scotland international revealed his struggle with an illness that required three operations and almost ended his career. "I couldn't leave the house," he said. "Simple stuff, like taking my kids to the park, going for a meal with my wife. "The nature of the illness meant I just couldn't do it. "There was a day in May when we said 'this is it'. Once I came out of that operation I would know whether it had worked or not. "There were no guarantees. If the operation was not a success there was no way I would be able to play football and my everyday life would have been very difficult. "It was very emotional. There was a lot of fear and anxiety." Now back in the action, Fletcher is hoping to feature again in Wednesday's League Cup quarter-final with Stoke. "I don't want to take it easy. I've done enough of that," he added. The farmers say the land is being taken away before compensation is agreed. Traffic in central Delhi was gridlocked for hours as they were addressed by opposition politicians. The use of land for industrial purposes is hugely controversial in India - protests have stalled similar projects elsewhere in the country. The government in Uttar Pradesh state has bought the farmers' land to build an eight-lane highway and business zone between Delhi and Agra, an important industrial centre that is also home to the Taj Mahal and other popular tourist sites. Earlier this month, three farmers in the state were killed when police fired at protesters demanding more compensation. The BBC's Mark Dummett, who was at the protest in Delhi, says the project is exactly the kind of large-scale development that India needs to create more jobs, but the farmers say they stand to lose out. Hundreds of millions of other Indians feel the same way, our correspondent says, and will not let land their families have farmed for hundreds of centuries be handed over easily or cheaply as the country rushes to industrialise. "When our land is taken away, where will we live, where will our children live? They're trying to grab our land!" said one farmer at the protest. "We haven't agreed on the compensation amount, and our lands have already been transferred to private companies!" Another protester accused the government of trying to acquire the land cheaply. "It's our heritage, our livelihood. When we don't have our land, what will we do - become a Maoist or a terrorist?" India's governing Congress party says it hopes to push through a new law soon guaranteeing higher levels of compensation for farmers who lose their land.
Developers behind a £100m hydro power plant on the edge of Snowdonia National Park have applied to lay underground cables to connect the scheme. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Manchester United midfielder Darren Fletcher says he is eager to help his side regain their form after recovering from his long-standing illness. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Thousands of farmers have held a protest in the Indian capital, Delhi, against the forced acquisition of their land for a new motorway.
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His comments come amid warnings of a "fake news" crisis in online media following last month's US elections. Social media platforms and search engines were widely criticised in the poll's aftermath for failing to prevent the spread of fabricated stories. The Pope himself fell victim to a fake news story, which falsely reported his endorsement of Donald Trump. In a frank interview with Belgian Catholic weekly Tertio, the pontiff said the media's obsession with scandal was akin to "coprophilia", an abnormal interest in excrement. This preyed on people's "tendency towards the sickness of coprophagia", the eating of excrement, he added, extending the analogy to apply it to the public's consumption of such coverage. People could not be expected to make "a serious judgment" about any situation if the media provided "only a part of the truth, and not the rest", he said. The issue of balance has been at the heart of the debate about changes in the way people access information in today's world. Beyond the rapid and far-reaching spread of fake news, analysts have also criticised social media platforms like Facebook for enabling an "echo chamber" to be created, in which people are far less likely to be exposed to both sides of an argument.
Pope Francis has condemned disinformation as "probably the greatest damage that the media can do".
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About 20 homes in the Westland Street area were evacuated for four hours following the discovery of a suspicious object at 20:45 GMT. Army bomb experts were called to the scene and the object was taken away for forensic examination. It was later declared to be a viable pipe bomb device. Ch Insp Gordon McCalmont said the security alert caused "considerable disruption to a large amount of local residents". "I would like to thank those people affected for their support and patience while we dealt with this viable device to make the area safe." Meanwhile, Sinn Féin councillor Colly Kelly said the device was discovered by a dog walker and found near a youth club that was packed with children at the time. He described the incident as "disgusting" and said the local community had been left angered by the disruption. Mr Kelly said whoever was responsible do not "represent the people of Derry". The Prince of Wales opened the new head office of risk management firm Alcumus in Cardiff. And he met community members at St Michael's Church in Llandovery. He made a donation to help save White Park Cattle from extinction during a visit to a herd at Llandeilo, Carmarthenshire. During his visit to Dinefwr Park in Llandeilo, the prince pledged support to the National Trust's Save the Herd campaign to help its effort to safeguard the White Park Cattle which have grazed the area for more than 1,000 years. About 750 White Park breeding females exist in the world, said the trust, which aims to raise £36,000 to buy a new bull and cows. Prince Charles also learned about the work of climate change charity the Size of Wales in Cwmbran, Torfaen, and he met with pupils taking part in its education programme at Blenheim Road Community Primary. The charity runs programmes to demonstrate the importance of rainforests and encourages young people to take action against climate change. The Duchess of Cambridge visited Torfaen and Caerphilly on Wednesday in her new role as royal patron of children's charities. Eddie Girvan, 67, was found in his home on Station Road in Greenisland by police at about 21:30 GMT on Monday. His hands were tied and he had a stab wound to his chest. The police said a 23-year-old man and a 24-year-old man who were arrested had been released unconditionally. A 29-year-old woman remains in custody.
A pipe bomb was found during a security alert in Londonderry on Thursday night, police have said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Prince Charles met children taking part in climate change education and learned about efforts to save rare cattle in a visit to Wales on Friday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two men arrested in connection with the murder of a man in County Antrim have been released unconditionally.
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Lawyers for the child claim the picture was blackmailed from her and repeatedly published online as a form of revenge. The girl is taking legal action against Facebook and the man who posted the photo in what is believed to be the first case of its kind in the world. A judge in Belfast refused Facebook's bid to end proceedings. The case will now advance to full trial at a later date. The girl's photograph was said to have been posted on a so-called "shame" page on Facebook several times between November 2014 and January 2016. A lawyer for the teenager likened it to a method of child abuse. It was contended that Facebook had the power to block any republication by using a DNA process to identify the image. The court heard it should have been a "red-line" issue for the company. The girl, who cannot be identified, is seeking damages for misuse of private information, negligence and breach of the Data Protection Act. A lawyer for Facebook argued the claim for damages should be dismissed, saying the company always took down the picture when it was notified. Facebook's lawyers relied on a European directive, claiming it provides protection from having to monitor a vast amount of online material for what is posted on one page. Flight SQ368, which departed at 02:05 local time on Monday (18:00 GMT Sunday), was two hours into the flight when the pilot announced there was an engine problem. The plane turned back and landed before the right engine of the Boeing 777 burst into flames. All 222 passengers and 19 crew on board were safely evacuated. "We were in the air for roughly an hour before we began to smell gas," one passenger who gave his name as Chuan told the BBC. "The pilot came on the intercom and said that there was an oil leak in one of the engines and that they were going to turn and go back to Singapore." Chuan added that all the passengers were very calm and that he actually "went back to sleep" after the announcement was made. It was only after he got off the flight that he realised how "close to death" he and his wife had been. Firefighters took about five to 10 minutes to extinguish the flames, he said. Passengers will be transferred to another aircraft which is expected to depart for Milan later on Monday, said Singapore Airlines in a statement on Facebook.
Facebook has failed in a bid to halt legal action over a naked photograph of a 14-year-old Northern Ireland girl being posted on the site. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Singapore Airlines plane bound for Milan caught fire shortly after making an emergency landing.
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The deal for the versatile 25-year-old, who can play on the left of defence or midfield, is subject to international clearance. Leu played for Moldovan club side FC Spicul last season and won an international cap in 2014. "We're delighted to add a full international to improve our squad," said Glens manager Alan Kernaghan "I am confident Alex will be a high quality addition," Kernaghan told the club website. "This further demonstrates the club's determination to build the strongest possible playing squad for this season. "We have worked very hard for some time now to get the deal over the line and I must again thank our loyal and dedicated supporters for their help." The arrival of Leu at the Oval follows the signing of former Rangers striker Nacho Novo last month. The review was led by Health Minister Lord Howe and examined the role of the Department of Health and the UK regulator the MHRA. It questions how well women with these implants were informed about the risks. It says that although the MHRA followed scientific and clinical advice, it should "review and further develop its communications capability." And it must "obtain evidence from a wider and more detailed set of sources..." The issue is with safety of silicone breast implants made by the French company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP). The firm's products were banned in 2010 when it emerged that industrial grade silicone was being used. Implants should be made from medical grade material, which has passed safety tests for use in a human body. The report says this was a case of deliberate fraud by the PIP manufacturer and regulation alone cannot prevent that. But it says a "higher level of proactive public communication could have been helpful", especially while awaiting toxicology test results. It suggests a more creative interaction with affected women, perhaps through use of social networking (like Facebook) could have been useful. In March the Commons Health Committee criticised the government and health regulator for failing to adopt a high profile sooner. Lord Howe says there is no evidence that the MHRA or the Department of Health significantly failed to do their job. "But serious lessons must be learned from this scandal. The MHRA needs to look at how it gathers evidence so it is able to identify problems early. It needs to better analyse reports about higher risk medical devices. And it needs to improve the way it communicates with the public." You can hear my interview with Lord Howe here: Between 2003 and 2010 more than 20 letters were sent from the MHRA to PIP raising concerns about the implants. In hindsight, "this body of evidence could be seen as suggestive of a problematic manufacturer." The review concludes that regulators in all EU countries need to work better together to support early detection of problems, share the information they gather and take appropriate action to protect patients. Commenting, the President of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, Fazel Fatah, said: "Poor post-marketing surveillance of medical devices lies at the root of the PIP crisis. At the BAAPS we feel there needs to be significantly more stringent monitoring of all medical devices including breast implants and all cosmetic injectables, via compulsory, regular reporting of adverse effects and mystery shopping which are all part of our regulation proposals." Around 47,000 women in the UK have PIP breast implants. Around 95% were fitted privately. A minority of operations were carried out on the NHS, mostly for breast reconstruction following cancer. Lord Howe's review into PIP implants is one of two set up by the Department of Health in January. The second review, led by Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, the NHS Medical Director, will look at whether the cosmetic surgery industry needs to be more effectively regulated. In January Prof Keogh's team concluded there was insufficient evidence to recommend the routine removal of PIP implants. But it recognised the concern that the issue was causing. It found there was no link between PIP implants and cancer, and the evidence on increased rupture rates was inconclusive. Throughout the UK any women who had PIP implants fitted on the NHS can get them removed and replaced free of charge. In Wales the NHS will also replace those of private patients. In England and Scotland the NHS will remove implants of private patients but not replace them. Latest figures from the Department of Health in England show that 6,632 women with private PIP implants have been referred for hospital checks; 3,865 scans have been completed. 433 women have decided to have the implants removed and 185 have had the surgery. 836 NHS patients with PIP implants have been contacted, 82 scans completed. 214 decisions have been made to remove the implants and 66 women have had this surgery.
Glentoran have signed Moldova international Alex Leu on a one-year contract. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A government review into the PIP breast implant scandal has found that serious lessons must be learned.
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United led 1-0 in Belgium until the 86th minute, when the hosts equalised with their first effort on target. "If I was a Manchester United defender, I would be very upset with the attacking players," Mourinho said. "They did the serious work. The people who had to kill the game didn't." Henrikh Mkhitaryan tapped in for United in the 36th minute, but it was the only successful effort of their 16 shots at goal. The visitors' attack lags well behind the rest of their top-four rivals in the Premier League, having scored only 46 goals. Chelsea, Tottenham, Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal have all managed more than 60. Zlatan Ibrahimovic is the team's top-scorer with 28 goals in all competitions, with Mkhitaryan and Juan Mata the only others in double figures. "It is the same problem," added Mourinho. "We had control, we had chances, but we do not score enough goals. "In my poor English, I cannot find a better word than sloppy. You have to play more seriously. "Put the performance of two or three of our attacking players together and you squeeze not much juice out of it. Marcus Rashford, Jesse Lingard, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Anthony Martial - they were very similar." Phil, Cardiff: Last half an hour the whole United attack just walking around with no desire to break with pace and kill the game off. The fact that they seem to be happy with a 1-0 at Anderlecht says how far United have fallen. And they paid the price with poor finishing as usual this season. Darragh, Belfast: Same old United this season we go one up and take the foot off the pedal, never look like we're gonna blow a team away! Not great for confidence with Chelsea on Sunday. Chris Perez: You can spend as much money on a squad as possible but without time they will play as separate pieces of the jigsaw. Jose will make United great again.
Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho blamed his side's "sloppy" attackers after Anderlecht grabbed a late equaliser in the teams' Europa League quarter-final first leg.
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The victim required medical treatment at hospital for minor injuries after being approached by the men, who made off with a three-figure sum of money. The incident happened in Ladeside, near Sports Direct, at 23:00 on Saturday. One of the men was described as about 25-years-old, wearing a black jacket with a red collar and cuffs, with blue jeans and black shoes. A second man was described as wearing a black jacket and blue jeans. There is no description for the third man. Police said all three suspects spoke with Polish accents and have appealed for witnesses to contact them. John Terry and Cesc Fabregas weighed in with the goals that moved Chelsea three points clear of Manchester City. After suffering defeat at the Britannia Stadium last season, Mourinho was happy to get the job done this time. "To win here they must be a really very good team with the capacity to adapt to Stoke's style of play," Mourinho said. "These victories mean more than three points. To win and get three points, the players need the right spirit and mentality. "Only with a great team performance is it possible to be successful against Stoke." The one controversy of the match came when referee Neil Swarbrick elected only to caution Stoke defender Phil Bardsley for a full-blooded challenge on Eden Hazard. Mourinho felt the tackle was worthy of a heavier punishment. "At that time, I felt the tackle was a bad one but if it was a bad one it was the only one," he said. "If the referee decided not to give a red and lost control of the game it is a problem but he kept control and we reacted well. At the end of the day it was a fair game, a typical English winter game." Emerging victorious from a Monday night trip to the Potteries was the first step in a challenging festive programme for the league leaders. In-form West Ham are the visitors to Stamford Bridge on Boxing Day ahead of trips to Southampton on 28 December and Tottenham on 1 January. "Now we have to focus on the three matches we still have until the end of this period," Mourinho added. "The three-point lead we have is a little advantage, it is a little pillow we have to protect us - we go home happy and pleased with what we did."
A 27-year-old man has been mugged in Perth by three men who stole his wallet. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jose Mourinho believes Chelsea's 2-0 win at Stoke, which secured top spot in the Premier League at Christmas, was worth "more than three points".
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Some of the archive, charting the 100-year-history of the Erskine Hospital, was recently found in a locked room in a disused part of the hospital. The hospital was formerly known as the Princess Louise Scottish Hospital for Sailors and Soldiers. Woodworking tools used to make prosthetic limbs are among the archive. The tools were used by some of the recovering soldiers as part of their rehabilitation and training in new skills. They made a wide range of wooden medical appliances for disabled soldiers, including the then pioneering Erskine Leg - a prosthetic limb designed and pioneered by Sir William Macewen, co-founder of the hospital and Regius Professor of Surgery at the University of Glasgow. Sir William's work led to a global advancement in prosthetic limbs. The archive contains a full collection of wooden shoe-size moulds used in the workshops for the manufacture of prosthetic legs. It is not known how long the objects and archive material had been stored in the building, but some items date back to the original founding of the hospital which celebrates its centenary next year. Additional records and documents were kept in boxes in various rooms throughout the hospital. The collection will now be catalogued by Glasgow University's Archives Services and stored at the university. Erskine are currently working on a patient database of every soldier admitted and discharged at the hospital during its history, which will become a research resource for families tracing their ancestry. The project has been funded by the Wellcome Trust which awards grants to libraries and archives to support cataloguing, preservation and digitisation projects. Steve Conway, chief Executive of The Erskine, said: "Archiving records and preserving artefacts was never high on the priority list until we started to prepare for our centenary. It was only then that we realised how much of our history had been recorded but largely neglected. "Hopefully, these records and artefacts will help people to research family histories and also support research in to the care of veterans with physical or mental injuries sustained in the service of their country." Dr Tony Pollard, senior lecturer in history and battlefield archaeology at Glasgow University, said: "What we are unearthing at Erskine is quite remarkable. "There are boxes upon boxes of wartime history which will shine a light on so many personal stories of bravery and endurance during the First World War, but also the incredible advancement in the treatment of injured personnel not just physically but mentally since 1916. "This archive will not only chart the hospital's history but also provide an insight into the many medical developments over the last century, methods which helped change care practices towards casualties of war around the globe. "I am quite certain once we really start to delve into the vast collection, the findings will be used in research for many years to come." The archive team is appealing for help to find an original Erskine Leg. Only one known Macewen-designed Erskine Leg survives in the British Museum, but archivists and historians at the University of Glasgow are convinced there are more.
Historical documents and artefacts from an old hospital, some of which were found underneath floorboards, are to be formally catalogued.
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The Scottish champions reached the group stage by beating Hapoel Beer Sheva 5-4 on aggregate. They will open their campaign away to Barcelona on Tuesday 13 September. "It is a great draw - three great teams," said Celtic left-back Kieran Tierney. "That is why we are in the Champions League, to play the best." After their opener in the Nou Camp, Celtic will host Manchester City on 28 September, before home and away games against Monchengladbach on 19 October and 1 November. They then entertain Barcelona on 23 November before concluding away to City on 6 December. Tierney, 19, will be experiencing the group stage for the first time, and is relishing the prospect of confronting Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi "It is just brilliant to watch [Barcelona], and hopefully I can play against him," the youngster added. "We are always hopeful. We prepare ourselves right and we do the right work on the training field. Anything can happen." Celtic have progressed to the last 16 of the competition on three occasions, most recently in season 2012-13. That season, under Neil Lennon, Celtic beat Barca 2-1 in Glasgow at the group stage but lost by the same scoreline away from home. The two teams met again in the following season's group stage, the Spanish side winning 1-0 in Glasgow and 6-1 at home. City - fourth in England's Premier League last season - and German side Monchengladbach have never previously faced Celtic in the competition. "It could've been easier," Celtic chief executive Peter Lawwell told BBC Radio Scotland's Sportsound. "There's some real glamour ties in there - some really great nights ahead at Celtic Park. "I don't think they will be relishing coming to us with the supporters, the atmosphere, the occasion we put on there. "It couldn't be any more difficult but [manager] Brendan [Rodgers] has got off to a great start. It has been a remarkable first couple of months for him. "We will attempt to get one more player in before next Wednesday's [transfer] deadline." Former Barca boss Pep Guardiola took over at City, who reached the semi-finals last season, in the summer while recent Celtic signing Kolo Toure is a former City player whose brother is still at the Manchester club and also once played for Barcelona. Rodgers, who took over from Ronny Deila in the summer, previously managed Liverpool at this stage of the competition.
Celtic have been drawn to face Barcelona, Manchester City and Borussia Monchengladbach in Champions League Group C.
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David Jack, 19, Bryan McCabe, 45, Steven Gordon, 28, and Alexander Lanni, 22, ran onto the Hampden Park pitch after Hibs played Rangers on 21 May. At Glasgow Sheriff Court, Jack, of Edinburgh, also admitted pushed Rangers player Andy Halliday. And Gordon, also of Edinburgh, pleaded guilty to kicking an unknown man while he was on the ground. Each of the men either ran towards or approached Rangers fans and gesticulated in a threatening or aggressive manner or behaved aggressively. They were among hundreds of fans who spilled on to the pitch after the full time whistle at the match which Hibs won 3-2. It led to scenes of disorder among a small number of supporters which "appalled" the Scottish Football Association. In court, Gordon was fined £566 and given an 18-month football banning order. McCabe, also from Edinburgh, was given the same length of order and a £400 fine. Sentence was deferred on Jack, from Edinburgh, until next month for a social work report and on Lanni, from Livingston, to call alongside his trial in December for allegedly assaulting a man at Hampden, which he denies. Three other football fans denied charges of running on to the pitch after the game. George Henderson, 49, from Penilee, is alleged to have behaved in an aggressive manner towards opposition fans and challenge an opposing fan to fight and attempt to punch them. Robert Barr, 19, from Kilbirnie, denies entering the field and approaching rival fans, brandishing a chair and behaving in a threatening manner as well as assaulting a man by kicking him on the body. Robert Smith, 24, from Glasgow, is also accused of entering the field, behaving in an aggressive manner, approaching opposing fans and waving his arm in the air, and assaulting someone by kicking them on the body. Sheriff Kenneth Hogg granted bail for each of them and Barr and Lanni have special conditions not to attend any football matches until the outcome of their cases. The new club secured promotion to the third tier with a 2-1 victory over Delta Calcio Rovigo on Sunday. The two-time Uefa Cup winners were wound up last summer after racking up debt of more than 200m euros (£143m). "The message that comes from Parma is that we're back," said captain Alessandro Lucarelli. Parma have eased through Serie D, the highest level of amateur football in Italy, setting a league record of 85 points from 35 matches. The new club, formed in July, is backed by pasta maker Guido Barilla with former coach Nevio Scala as president. Scala, 67, guided Parma to three of their four European successes in the 1990s. In addition to two Uefa Cups, between 1992 and 2002 Parma also won the European Super Cup, European Cup Winners' Cup, three Coppa Italias and an Italian Super Cup. "We are enjoying the rewards of an extraordinary ride," said Scala. "Let's enjoy the victory, as it's the first of a process that we hope will see us as contenders again next year." Coach Luigi Apolloni, the former Italy defender who played for Parma between 1987 and 2000, added: "This was a victory for the whole city." Aberdeenshire West MSP Alexander Burnett was elected in May. The SNP said the allegations were a "serious matter", but the Scottish Conservatives said the SNP was "engaged in a nothing more than a politically-motivated fishing expedition". Police said an election expenses complaint was under consideration. An SNP spokesperson said: "The fact that these allegations have now been reported to Police Scotland, in line with the advice of the Electoral Commission, underlines the seriousness of this matter for Alexander Burnett and Ruth Davidson. "As such, it is only right that the police are now given the opportunity to fully investigate any potential breach of election rules." A spokesman for the Scottish Conservatives said: "The SNP tried the Electoral Commission first, was told it had gone to the wrong place, and is now trying the police."
Four Hibs fans have admitted their part in a pitch invasion at the end of the Scottish Cup final. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Parma have returned to Italy's professional ranks after the reborn club clinched promotion in their first season following bankruptcy. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Scottish Conservative MSP has been reported to Police Scotland over allegations he breached election campaign spending rules.
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Among the five legislative votes scheduled, Wednesday's vote on new national emissions caps for five pollutants is most likely to generate attention. Not for the first time this year, the main political interest may lie in the motion votes - chief among which is a vote on the EU's strained relations with Turkey. On Thursday, MEPs will vote on a draft resolution calling for the EU to freeze the country's accession talks following a failed coup against the government in July. It comes as the main centre-left group last week abandoned support for the current talks following crackdowns against journalists and opposition politicians. Although the vote will not be binding on EU governments, it could serve to further worsen relations between the bloc and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Here's a rundown of the main events this week… European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi will join MEPs at the start of the day's sitting to debate the Bank's annual report for 2015. Last year saw the ECB launch a massive bond-buying programme, known as quantitative easing (QE), in a bid to boost borrowing in the eurozone. It also marked the first full year of the ECB exercising its new responsibilities for supervising the health of the eurozone's largest banks. Critics of the QE programme have said it hits savers and widens inequality by boosting asset prices. However Bank chiefs have said the programme has played an important role in supporting a still-fragile eurozone recovery. After this, MEPs will debate proposed changes to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's international banking requirements. There is some concern the changes could put some European banks at a disadvantage to their US competitors. In the evening, MEPs will debate three non-binding motions that will be put a vote on Tuesday - the most noteworthy is a motion calling for greater military co-operation between EU states. In the morning, MEPs will debate how EU debt and deficit rules should be applied next year. The EU Commission said last week that the draft budgets of eight eurozone countries were "at risk" of not complying with agreed EU limits. However some MEPs have criticised the EU executive for not taking punitive action against states that break the rules. They will also debate new EU rules obliging tax authorities to automatically share certain bank account information to tackle money laundering. After the lunchtime voting session, EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini will join MEPs to discuss the situation in Syria. It comes as the Syrian government last week renewed air strikes and shelling on rebel-held parts of Aleppo, according to activists. They will then debate relations with Turkey, which have been under strain since a failed coup against the government of President Erdogan in July. A crackdown against opposition politicians, civil servants and journalists in the wake of the coup attempt has prompted increasing criticism from within the EU. A topical motion which could call for the country's EU membership bid to be frozen will be voted on during Thursday's session. After this, MEPs will debate draft motions on the EU's common security and defence policies, and efforts to counter "disinformation and propaganda" from Russia and Islamic State (IS) group. In the evening they will also discuss plans for an EU "skills guarantee" scheme to boost literacy and numeracy skills among low-skilled adults. The scheme would target those without a formal secondary education but too old to be eligible for the EU's youth guarantee scheme for under-25s. The morning sitting will see MEPs debate stricter national emissions caps for five key pollutants, to apply from 2030. MEPs agreed a compromise position on the new legal limits with member states at the end of June, which will be put to a final vote at lunchtime. New limits for methane - as originally proposed by the Commission in 2013 - were dropped after opposition from some governments. The winner of the annual LUX prize for European cinema will be announced at around 11.00 GMT, before lunchtime's voting session. Among the motions to be put to the vote is one calling for the EU's recently-signed trade deal with Canada to be examined by the European Court of Justice (ECJ). The agreement was signed last month after seven years of negotiations - but still needs to be ratified by the European Parliament before it can fully come into force. Eighty-nine MEPs have backed a motion asking for the Court to rule on whether the investor protection measures in the deal comply with EU law. Without substantial support from the centre-right parties, it is unlikely to be passed. After the voting session, MEPs will debate a proposal to grant €200m in EU loans to Jordan to help it cope with economic instability and refugee crisis. A vote on whether to approve the loans will take place on Thursday. They will also debate changes to EU rules governing cross-border pensions, also to be put to a vote on Thursday. The evening will see discussions on non-binding motions to change the EU's VAT rules to clamp down on fraud, and calling for EU-wide sanctions on the traffickers of wildlife products. The day's short sitting starts with a debate with European Ombudsman Emily O'Reilly about her department's work during 2015. At lunchtime MEPs are likely to pass a motion backing her investigations into "revolving doors" cases involving EU ex-commissioners. Ms O'Reilly recently raised concerns about the appointment of Jose Manuel Barroso as an advisor at US investment bank Goldman Sachs. Last month an EU ethics panel cleared the ex-Commission President of breaching the EU executive's conduct rules. The Ombudsman has hinted that she may open an inquiry given the "concern that continues to be expressed" about the appointment. After this MEPs will debate this month's resolutions on human rights cases - this month relating to China, Brazil and Russia. The motion on Turkey's EU membership bid will be voted on at lunchtime, along with a motion on the situation in Syria following the debate on Tuesday. A short afternoon session will consist of a single short debate on access to energy targets in the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. Please note: This agenda is subject to modification at the opening of the session on Monday afternoon. A guide to how the European Parliament's plenary sessions can be found here.
A rather thin legislative agenda awaits MEPs at their monthly plenary sitting in Strasbourg this week.
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Stefan Jacoby, 54, is handing the reins over to Jan Gurander, the chief financial officer, who will serve as the acting chief executive. The Zhejiang Geely owned Volvo has admitted that it is struggling to build up its retail operation in China. Volvo cars are currently imported to China from factories overseas. Volvo has high hopes that China will account for about a quarter of its global sales by 2020. Last year the automotive manufacturer sold almost 450,000 cars across the world, but wants that to increase to 800,000 by 2020. Stefan Jacoby has been the chief executive at Volvo since August 2010, joining the company after being the president and chief executive of Volkswagen's American arm. "I was lucky that it was a mild stroke," Jacoby said, "I am currently experiencing limited movement abilities in my right arm and, to some extent, also in my right leg." He is determined to return to work soon. "Now I will focus on resting and exercising, in order to get back to work as soon as possible," he said. The iconic Swedish car brand was bought in 2010 by the Chinese carmaker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group for $1.8bn, from Ford Motor Company. The 22-year-old left-armer is now tied to the Division Two side until the end of the 2019 season. Taylor took 13 wickets in five Championship matches for Gloucestershire this year, as well as playing eight games in the One-Day Cup and 13 in the T20 Blast. All-rounder Benny Howell also signed a new deal until 2019 on Wednesday. "The club is going in the right direction and I believe we can compete in all three formats," said Taylor, younger brother of Gloucestershire all-rounder Jack Taylor. "It's an exciting group to be part of."
The chief executive of the Chinese owned car company Volvo is temporarily standing down from his post for a month, after suffering a mild stroke. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Gloucestershire seamer Matt Taylor has signed a two-year contract extension with the county.
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US-born Ms Young, 23, beat 126 other contestants and pledged to be "the best Miss World ever". The competition was moved to Bali from the capital, Jakarta, because of protests from hardline Muslim groups. Security for Saturday's event was high in Bali, a resort island with a majority Hindu population, but no further demonstrations were reported. Miss France, Marine Lorphelin, came second in the contest and Miss Ghana, Carranzar Naa Okailey Shooter, took third place. Wearing a glittering gown, Ms Young, who moved to the Philippines at the age of 10, wept as the Miss World sash was put over her shoulder by 2012 winner Miss China. She told the cheering crowd in Nusa Dua in southern Bali she would "be myself in everything I do, to share what I know and to educate people". Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim country and the organisers had originally offered to abandon the contest's bikini round in an attempt to address complaints of pornography and immorality. Protests were led by the hardline Islamic Defenders' Front (FPI), which had planned to cross to the island from East Java but were prevented when the port was shut late on Friday. The event, broadcast in 180 countries, was guarded by heavily armed police with water cannon while some 1,000 FPI members held a prayer session at a mosque outside Jakarta. James Carson claimed four goals, with James Kyriakides (2), Owain Dolan-Gray, Rupert Shipperley and Luke Hawker also scoring. On Sunday, Wales opened their account with a 2-1 win against Czech Republic and next face Russia on Wednesday looking to seal a semi-final spot. The winners of the event will be promoted to Championship I. Wales captain Hawker was delighted with the result: "We couldn't be happier, the mood within the camp is really good as you'd expect coming off the back of a 9-0 performance. "It's something we've been working towards for the last couple of years really... it's great sat here having played two and won two." The women's team are also in EuroHockey competition and began on Sunday with a 6-1 win over Austria in their B Division tournament in Cardiff. The train will run between the city centre and the suburb of Syokimau, where Kenya has built its first railway station in more than 80 years. The service is intended to ease traffic congestion in Nairobi, one of the fastest-growing African cities with a population of about three million. President Mwai Kibaki was the first commuter on the new train. He travelled back to Nairobi along with his officials, while ordinary passengers were banned for security reasons. The first paying customers are expected to take the return trip to Syokimau. The BBC's Wanyama Chebusiri in Nairobi says the new service will be much faster then the existing dilapidated trains and will run on a separate track. The 16.5-km (10-mile) ride from Syokimau, in the east, to Nairobi is expected to take 15 minutes, while a car journey during rush-hour could take up to two hours, our reporter says. The new station at Syokimau is modern - it will issue passengers with electronic tickets to swipe at turnstiles and there are also large screens to give train times, he adds. The journey is the cheapest way of getting to central Nairobi, costing about $2.50 (£1.50). Mr Kibaki has inaugurated the service, and is expected to be the first passenger to take the ride. The launch is part of the government's ambitious Vision 2030 initiative to improve much-neglected infrastructure over the next 18 years, our reporter says. A Chinese company has just built Kenya's first eight-lane highway, linking Nairobi to the densely populated industrial town of Thika, about 40 km away. It was built at a cost of about 28bn shillings ($330m; £200m). Although the highway has not been officially launched, motorists are already using it. The government says its next rail project will be to link Nairobi's city centre to the eastern residential area of Kayole.
The 2013 Miss World pageant has been won by Miss Philippines, Megan Young, on the Indonesian island of Bali. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Wales continued their 2017 EuroHockey Championship II campaign by thumping Switzerland 9-0 in Pool B in Glasgow. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A new commuter train has been launched in Kenya's capital, Nairobi - the first of its kind since independence in 1963.
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Donnelly had to go off early in Sunday's win over Roscommon after taking a bang to the head so Peter Harte switches to centre half-back. Padraig McNulty is called up while the other change sees keeper Niall Morgan replacing Mickey O'Neill. Declan McClure switches from midfield to the half-forward line. Monaghan manager Malachy O'Rourke has named an unchanged team from the line-up which started in the win over Mayo for Sunday's Division One derby against Cavan at Castleblayney. Derry boss Damian Barton makes two changes from the opening Division Two draw against Clare for Sunday's game against Meath in Navan. Goalkeeper Ben McKinless will make his first league start in place of Thomas Mallon while Mark Lynch is missing from the match-day squad as Danny Tallon is drafted into the full-forward line. Armagh boss Kieran McGeeney makes three changes from the opening Division Three draw with Sligo for Sunday's game against Laois at the Athletic Grounds. Paul Hughes, Aidan Forker and Aaron Findon replace Shea Heffron, Ciaran Higgins and Ben Crealey. Tyrone (v Dublin): N Morgan, P Hampsey, R McNamee, C McCarron, T McCann, P Harte, J Munroe, C Cavanagh, P McNulty, C Meyler, N Sludden, D McClure, D McCurry, C McShane, R O'Neill. Monaghan (v Cavan): R Beggan; F Kelly, D Wylie, R Wylie; K Duffy, N McAdam, C Walshe; D Hughes, K Hughes; K O'Connell, S Carey, G Doogan; C McCarthy, T Kerr, C McManus. Derry (v Meath): B McKinless; N Keenan, C Nevin, R Murphy; N Forester, M McEvoy, P Hagan; C McAtamney, J Kielt; E Lynn, N Loughlin, C McWilliams; B Heron, E McGuckin, D Tallon. Armagh (v Laois): M McNeice; M Shields, C Vernon, P Hughes; A Forker, N Rowland, A McKay; S Sheridan, A Findon; N Grimley, C White, S Campbell; A Duffy, E Rafferty, O MacIomhair.
Mattie Donnelly will miss Tyrone's Football League Division One contest with All-Ireland champions Dublin at Croke Park on Saturday night.
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That meant the Olympic athlete was criminally responsible for his actions when he shot her, the prosecution said. The defence team has said Mr Pistorius was suffering from an anxiety disorder. The athlete denies deliberately killing Reeva Steenkamp. He says he shot her accidentally in a state of panic after mistaking her for an intruder. The prosecution says Mr Pistorius deliberately killed Ms Steenkamp following an argument. Both prosecution and defence have accepted the results of the psychological report but it has not been published. "Mr Pistorius did not suffer from a mental illness or defect that would have rendered him criminally not responsible for the offence charged," said state prosecutor Gerrie Nel, reading from the psychologist report. Judge Thokozile Masipa said she had only received it on Monday morning and so had not yet read it, reports the AFP news agency. On balance this was a good day for the defence. The panel of experts may have concluded that Oscar Pistorius is neither mentally ill, nor unable to tell right from wrong, but his own psychiatrist actually said much the same, although she did conclude that he had an anxiety disorder. Besides, we still don't know the details of the new report - only the short highlights helpfully selected and read out by the prosecution. Then the athlete's doctor, Gerry Versfeld, provided some compelling evidence about the athlete's disability - and the pain and lack of balance he experienced on his stumps. After that, the court heard a highly technical summary from acoustic expert Ivan Lin. His main role was to raise doubts about the testimony of several neighbours, called by the state, that they had heard a woman screaming so clearly that they could even tell her emotional state. Mr Lin suggested that it would have been very difficult, if not impossible, for any of those witnesses - given their distance from Mr Pistorius' home - to have heard with such clarity. The prosecution will cross-examine Mr Lin on Tuesday. Before the case was adjourned until Tuesday, the defence called acoustic expert Ivan Lin to give evidence in the hope of discrediting prosecution witnesses who said they heard the scream of a woman on the night Ms Steenkamp was killed. Earlier, the court heard from Dr Gerry Versfeld, who amputated Mr Pistorius' legs when he was just 11 months old. He was born without the fibulas in both of his legs but went on to become an Olympic athlete. Dr Versfeld testified about the impact of the disability on Mr Pistorius, 27, and to what extent he could walk without his prosthetic legs. He was on his stumps when he shot Ms Steenkamp and has argued that made him feel vulnerable when he heard a noise in the middle of the night. During Dr Versfeld's testimony, Judge Masipa was asked to inspect Mr Pistorius' stumps but the public were prevented from seeing. The defence is expected to finish presenting its evidence in the next few days. The prosecution requested the evaluation after a defence witness said the double amputee was suffering from Generalised Anxiety Disorder (Gad). Mr Pistorius, 27, underwent a month of tests as an outpatient at Weskoppies psychiatric hospital in Pretoria. He has often displayed his emotions during the trial, and has sobbed and vomited in court. Ms Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model and law graduate, was shot through a toilet door at Mr Pistorius' house in Pretoria on Valentine's Day last year. The couple had been dating for three months. There are no juries at trials in South Africa, so the athlete's fate will ultimately be decided by the judge, assisted by two assessors. If found guilty of murder, Mr Pistorius, who went on trial on 3 March, could face life imprisonment. If he is acquitted of that charge, the court will consider an alternative charge of culpable homicide, for which he could receive about 15 years in prison.
Oscar Pistorius did not have a mental disorder when he killed his girlfriend, a psychological report said as his murder trial resumed.
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The company said that 580 jobs will go this year with up to 500 more next year. That is equivalent to around 20% of its workforce in Northern Ireland. It also announced that 270 jobs are to go at its trains business, UK for Rail, which employs 3,500 people at several sites. Bombardier is cutting 7,000 jobs across its global workforce. The company has been under severe financial pressure as cost overruns on its new C Series jet have drained cash out of the company. In a statement the firm said: "We deeply regret the impact this will have on our workforce and their families, but it is crucial that we right-size our business in line with market realities" Bombardier Vice-President Michael Ryan said: "The whole global aerospace world is looking at how they can optimise their costbase and that includes going to what we would call lower cost countries. "If we want to compete being in a global market place then we need to take advantage of that where it's relevant. "But I have to say that the technologies we're investing in, the value-added process, the higher value programmes we're looking at, are a key part of Belfast's future going forward and will continue to be." One Bombardier employee, who asked not to be named, said the atmosphere at the firm on Thursday was "grim to say the least". "It's hard to work in these circumstances," he said. "Everyone's worried. Given what's happened [at other Northern Ireland firms] over the past 12 months, we know that nothing is guaranteed." The engineer said the news will leave many highly specialised workers out of a job with no prospect of finding other employment. "As we saw with the shipyard, once those skills are gone, they're gone," he said. "At the end of the day, we can't all answer phones in Northern Ireland. That seems to be the only kind of work available at the minute and it's not for everyone. "Most of these workers will have to go on the dole or move away. It's sad." In a statement the trade union Unite, said: "This jobs loss announcement is the latest, cruel blow to Northern Ireland's manufacturing sector. "The scale of the losses reflect the severe market conditions being experienced by the group, which has led to over 7000 job losses globally. "The Northern Ireland Executive needs to redouble their efforts and secure alternative employment for those highly skilled workers who will be made redundant. Invest NI must now commit themselves fully to proactively seeking foreign investment in manufacturing." The C Series programme received $1bn (almost £700m) from the state government in Quebec last year. The firm has also been hit by a downturn in the business jet market. Bombardier is the largest manufacturing employer in Northern Ireland and supports hundreds more jobs through its supply chains. Of the 580 jobs being cut this year 380 come from the firm's "complementary labour force". That part of the workforce is made up of temporary and contract workers and tends to fluctuate depending on demand. Announcing its annual results Bombardier said turnover fell 9.5% in the year to December to $18.2bn (£12.7bn). Pre tax profits dropped 40% to $554m (£388m). The company said Air Canada has ordered 75 of its CSeries 300 jets. Late last year the Northern Ireland workforce was asked to accept pay cuts and other changes to terms and conditions with the firm saying it was "in serious financial crisis". However the proposal was overwhelmingly rejected in a ballot of union members. The Enterprise Minister Jonathan Bell has expressed his "deep regret" at the move. The impact of this decision will be hard felt in Northern Ireland He said: "First and foremost, my thoughts are with the workers and their families as they absorb today's news. "The company has taken this decision to rationalise its workforce across all its sites in order to ensure its viability for the future." He added that the firm had received £75m of NI Executive assistance between 2002 and 2015. Blaise Alavares, 33, had been in a critical condition in hospital since the fire on 6 November. His wife Sharon Alavares died in November. The tribute thanked people for their support, describing Mr Alavares as a "kind and loving son". Police have said the fire was not being treated as suspicious.
The aerospace firm Bombardier has said it will cut more than 1,000 jobs from its Northern Ireland operation. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Tributes have been paid to a man who has died weeks after a house fire in Swindon which killed his wife and left his toddler daughter critically ill.
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Defending herself on BBC 5 live, Wendy Watson said she did not know trustees needed Charity Commission permission for payment from a charity. Mrs Watson has now resigned as a trustee with the National Hereditary Breast Cancer Helpline. Her payments were discovered by The Charity Commission. The commission began its investigation after noticing financial irregularities and it warned about "significant breaches of trust". Mrs Watson. who was paid £31,000 over five years as a trustee of the charity she founded in 1996, denied allegations she had paid the money to herself. She stated: "The accountants paid me. I didn't pay myself, I can assure you." Mrs Watson said she did not know the payments had breached laws relating to charity trustees. And she added: "If I had known, I would never have been trustee and could have been just an employee and then none of this would have been an issue." Mrs Watson continued: "In 2012 I got professional advice to set up the charity. They put me as a trustee and didn't say I couldn't ever work for the charity again or be paid and so I happily went on as a trustee." Asked if she had made a mistake, she responded: "I trusted the professionals that I employed. I was so busy answering the phone 24 hours a day and getting on with setting up these charity shops to provide long-term income for the charity." Mrs Watson added: "I accept I made a mistake in trusting the professionals to give me advice instead of checking for myself." "If you work it out what I was paid over five years, I was paid £31,000 for 24-hours-a-day work - that equates to less than 60p an hour, I don't think anybody would think that was excessive." Mrs Watson also said: "I certainly apologise if people think that I did not do the right thing." She added: "I was stupid. I didn't realise. I just went along with what I was told." Mrs Watson, of Derbyshire, founded the charity four years after she became the first woman in the UK to have a pre-emptive mastectomy. Five years ago she was appointed MBE for services to people with breast cancer. The charity was set up to raise awareness and fund a phoneline where people could speak to Mrs Watson for support and advice. By 2012, it was raising almost £1m a year from charity shops in Derbyshire, Yorkshire, Greater Manchester, Humberside and London.
A breast cancer charity founder criticised for receiving £31,000 from the fund has said she was "stupid" not to check if she could be paid legally.
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The Southern California Gas Company (SoCal Gas) had been pumping in heavy fluids and cement to seal the well. The leak began in October in a vast underground storage field in Porter Ranch, on the outskirts of Los Angeles. The natural gas leak, one of the largest in US history, has caused thousands to relocate. The escaping gas at the Aliso Canyon storage field accounted for a fifth of all methane emissions - an extremely potent greenhouse gas - across the entire state of California. "This has been among the worst environmental catastrophes in recent history," said Robin Greenwald, a senior attorney with Weitz & Luxenberg, a law firm which is taking legal action on behalf of some Porter Ranch residents. "The public health crisis it caused is far from over," said Ms Greenwald, arguing that her clients still did not know if it was safe to return to their homes. They were uncertain about the safety of the 114 other wells on the site and had not been given "assurances that the interior of their homes are safe," she said. "The lack of transparency by all those involved is inexcusable." The leak may be over but the blame game has only just begun. SoCal Gas and its regulators are squabbling over who was responsible for the catastrophic failure at Aliso Canyon. The company insists it acted in accordance with the law. The state of California disagrees (although it has admitted that regulations might need tightening) and the battle is playing out in the courts. Many residents of Porter Ranch and neighbouring communities, literally sick of the whole affair, think both sides are at fault, accusing them of an "incestuous" relationship. They have many outstanding questions. What are the long-term health impacts of exposure to the gas? Will residents be compensated adequately for the nightmare of the past four months? Will SoCal Gas be allowed to continue operating the facility or will it be shut down? There are questions too for the United States as a whole. With gas in California's air and lead in Michigan's water, crumbling infrastructure and weak regulation are putting people at risk across the country, say environmental campaigners. Action is needed at a national level, they argue, or the disasters will just keep happening. Last week a crew from SoCal Gas injected heavy fluids into the well - in the Santa Susana mountains around a mile from the nearest homes - before pumping in cement to make a seal. The gas company on Wednesday pleaded not guilty to criminal charges for allegedly waiting three days to report the huge leak back in October. The latest estimate for the amount of methane emitted from the leaking well, taken on 13 February, is 94,067,040kg (94,000 metric tonnes), according to the California Air Resources Board. Spokesman Stanley Young told the BBC this meant that during the leak California's entire emissions of methane rose "by roughly 20%", pushing up the state's total annual methane emissions by around 6%. Mr Young said final figures for the amount of gas emitted would not be known for several weeks. Aliso Canyon is a 3,600 acre site comprising 115 wells and is the second largest such facility in the US. In early January, the company apologised but said it was not responsible for what environmental groups say is an environmental catastrophe. Many living close to the site had been complaining of nausea, headaches and other symptoms. Environmental campaigner Erin Brockovich described it as the worst environmental disaster in the US since 2010.
A leaking gas well near the US city of Los Angeles which has been polluting the air for four months has been "permanently sealed," officials say.
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Sean Spicer said Mr Trump had broadly meant "surveillance and other activities" when he made the allegation in a tweet earlier this month. He also suggested the president was not accusing his predecessor specifically. Meanwhile, the justice department has asked for more time to provide information about the allegations. A congressional committee had set a Monday deadline for the department to provide any evidence of President Trump's claims but a spokeswoman said it needed "additional time... to determine what if any responsive documents may exist". The House Intelligence Committee said it would give the department until 20 March to comply with its request. In his tweet Mr Trump said: "Just found out that Obama had my 'wires tapped' in Trump Tower just before the victory." He added: "Is it legal for a sitting President to be 'wire tapping' a race for president?" Despite repeated requests, the White House has not given any evidence for the claim. It has instead asked Congress to examine the allegation as part of an investigation into alleged Russian meddling in last year's election. A spokesman for Mr Obama has said the accusation is "simply false". "The president used the word wiretap in quotes to mean broadly surveillance and other activities," Mr Spicer told reporters. "There's a whole host of tactics that can be used to monitor somebody either through wiretap or other ways," he added, without giving details. Mr Spicer also suggested Mr Trump was referring to the actions of the Obama administration and not accusing the former president directly. Earlier, Senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said she did not have any evidence to back up the wiretapping claim but said there were "many ways to surveil each other now". "You can surveil someone through their phones, certainly through their television sets - any number of ways... microwaves that turn into cameras. We know this is a fact of modern life," she told New Jersey's Bergen County Record.
Unsubstantiated claims by US President Donald Trump that he was wiretapped by Barack Obama were not meant literally, the White House press secretary says.
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The opposition has called for Ms Rousseff's impeachment over a huge corruption scandal in the state-owned oil company, Petrobras. Most of the politicians accused of taking bribes are from Brazil's governing coalition. Anti-government marches are expected to take place on Sunday. Ms Rousseff was head of Petrobras for seven years, when much of the corruption is believed to have taken place. But she has not been implicated in the corruption scandal. Government supporters say the calls for her impeachment, less than four months after she was re-elected to a second four-year term, amounts to a coup attempt. Pro-government demonstrations are going ahead in 14 Brazilian states. Most of them have been called by unions that support the governing Workers' Party. "I am here to prevent that they take away the social benefits we have earned," said 69-year-old Alaide Pereira da Silva at a march in the city of Ribeirao Preto, in Sao Paulo state. "We can't blame Dilma [Rousseff]. The congressmen are to blame. She doesn't govern on her own," she told O Globo newspaper. Last week, the Supreme Court approved the investigation of 54 people for their alleged involvement in the kickback scheme. The list was prepared by the Attorney General, Rodrigo Janot, who alleged that private companies paid corrupt officials in order to get lucrative Petrobras contracts. According to the investigation, high-profile politicians also took a share of the money siphoned off from the oil company. Mr Junot's list includes Senate President Renan Calheiros, President of the Chamber of Deputies Eduardo Cunha, former Energy Minister Edison Lobao and former President Fernando Collor de Mello. In December, prosecutors charged executives from six of the country's largest construction firms for allegedly channelling kickbacks into a Petrobras scheme to pay politicians.
Thousands of government supporters across Brazil have been taking part in marches to show their backing for President Dilma Rousseff.
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The Northern Irishman, 26, revealed on Monday he had ruptured an ankle ligament playing football with friends. Confirming he would not compete at St Andrews, he posted on Instagram: "I'm taking a long-term view of this injury. "Although rehab is progressing well, I want to come back to tournament play when I feel 100% healthy and 100% competitive." The 2015 Open begins on 16 July, and tournament organisers said they were "naturally very disappointed" at McIlroy's withdrawal. They added: "Rory will play in many more Opens and our primary concern is for his complete recovery." McIlroy, who has won four majors, could also miss the chance to defend his US PGA Championship title in mid-August. McIlroy ruptured his left ankle ligament on Saturday during a "soccer kickabout with friends". On Monday he wrote on Instagram: "Total rupture of left ATFL (ankle ligament) and associated joint capsule damage. Continuing to assess extent of injury and treatment plan day by day. Rehab already started..... Working hard to get back as soon as I can." At the time, McIlroy had not ruled himself out of the Open and an announcement on his condition had not been expected until the weekend. McIlroy finished fourth at the Masters in April, and joint ninth at last month's US Open. Both tournaments were won by American Jordan Spieth. The Northern Irishman missed the cut at the Honda Classic in March, but won the World Golf Championships Match Play and the Wells Fargo Championship in May. McIlroy's Ryder Cup team-mate Graeme McDowell: "I wasn't expecting him to play in the Open, so I'm not surprised he's pulled out. But it's a massive blow for the tournament, he's the world's number one player. "No-one would love to stop Jordan Spieth in his tracks next week more than Rory. With the fun rivalry going on and everything, he's going to be gutted. I saw the golf course last Saturday and I believed that Rory was rightly a favourite. I thought he'd get it done round there." Former US Open champion Justin Rose: "I would have been surprised if he was there given the initial diagnosis but it's a big shame for him and the tournament." Florida-based Scot Russell Knox who was first reserve and replaces McIlroy in the field at St Andrews: "Nobody wants to get in because someone got injured but I am happy I am in the field and can't wait to give it a blast." Spieth said McIlroy had done nothing wrong by playing football with friends ahead of the Open: "It's unlucky, it's unfortunate and I'm sure he's taking it harder on himself than anybody else. "But I don't think he did anything wrong. It just was an unfortunate situation and hopefully he rebounds quickly and gets back right to where he was." Assistant Mayor Daniella Radice said Bristol's reputation was attracting taggers from outside the area. Police believe more than 80 people are what it called "actively offending" in the area. Ms Radice said she wanted to recognise "the contribution that street art can make, while opposing tagging". Bristol is known for its connections to street artist Banksy - the city's tourism body promotes walking tours of his murals - and is also home to Upfest, an international street art festival which is taking place in Bedminster and Southville this weekend. But Green Party councillor Ms Radice told BBC Radio Bristol: "Because we are a city that's celebrated for our street art... people think if they come and tag here, maybe they will get some extra recognition for it." She wanted to "re-write" the existing policy to help make it clearer "what we think is art and what we think is not", to include strict enforcement against tagging while supporting "street art". She said more "legal walls" might be needed - currently there is one in a park near junction 3 of the M32 - and more resources might be needed to help communities and businesses clean up tagging. Avon and Somerset Police have been running "Operation Block" alongside the council - targeting illegal graffiti and "tagging" - where people spray their signatures onto walls. Last month a man from Bournemouth received a suspended sentence after admitting 78 counts of criminal damage in the city while another man from York admitted causing damage at 15 locations.
World number one and defending champion Rory McIlroy will miss next week's Open after injuring his left ankle. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Bristol City Council plans to re-write its approach to graffiti in the city, which is known internationally for its street art.
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Chelsea winger Hazard fired a low shot into the corner after a dazzling run to record his fourth goal in four games. But substitute Benteke earned the Reds a point in added time when he pounced after an error from Asmir Begovic. Liverpool remain eighth and are within three points of sixth-placed West Ham with a game left. Relive the action from Anfield Reaction from Wednesday's Premier League matches, as Newcastle & Norwich are relegated Jurgen Klopp's side, who play West Brom on the final day, have another chance to secure European football next season when they play Sevilla in the Europa League final on 18 May, with a Champions League spot awarded to the winner. Chelsea remain ninth. In a game that was often short on quality in the final third, Hazard was the outstanding performer. The Belgium international has endured a difficult season after being named Professional Footballers' Association Player of the Year last season, suffering with injuries and loss of form as defending champions Chelsea slid down the table. But after failing to score in the Premier League until April, the 25-year-old now has four in his last four games - and here he was back to his very best. Showing mesmeric balance and close control on the ball, Hazard had 96 touches - more than anyone else on the pitch - and found a team-mate with 95.2% of his passes. His upturn in form has come too late to save Chelsea's season - or the job of former manager Jose Mourinho - but Hazard's performance suggests he could peak for the European Championship, where, in the absence of Vincent Kompany, he will captain Belgium. Klopp's side are on a roll at Anfield, having gone 12 unbeaten at home and easily swatted aside Villarreal and Watford in their past two matches. Having restored many first-team regulars to the team after fielding a largely second-string side against the Hornets, Liverpool faded after a bright start and could have been further behind had Bertrand Traore not curled wide after rounding Simon Mignolet. But they improved after the break, increasing their share of possession from 52% to 58%, and Daniel Sturridge and Kolo Toure missed glorious chances before Benteke's late intervention. Fellow substitute Sheyi Ojo swung over a searching cross from the left and Begovic could only palm it into the path of the Belgium striker. Klopp downplayed the result's importance, but this was a point that will maintain the feelgood factor at Anfield under the charismatic German before their second final of the season. Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: "The result tonight was not important, what's important is that we take the right information out of the game. "We started very well, and when we play like that with our compact defending we can be good. In a game like this, the crowd force you to attack. We have to develop a lot. "I like it here. It's a nice place and a world-class club." Media playback is not supported on this device Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink: "The team reacted very well. We played all game for the win and got an unlucky present in the last minute. We should have killed it off and I'm disappointed not to have the three points. "Hazard was terrific and has been growing in fitness for some weeks. It's good to see. He had to suffer a lot with injuries this year but I'm very happy he's back. "The players showed they love to play football." Media playback is not supported on this device The final day on Sunday sees Liverpool travel to the Hawthorns to face West Brom and Chelsea host champions Leicester. Match ends, Liverpool 1, Chelsea 1. Second Half ends, Liverpool 1, Chelsea 1. Joe Allen (Liverpool) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Kenedy (Chelsea). Substitution, Chelsea. Ruben Loftus-Cheek replaces Pedro. Goal! Liverpool 1, Chelsea 1. Christian Benteke (Liverpool) header from the right side of the six yard box to the bottom right corner. Offside, Chelsea. Eden Hazard tries a through ball, but Baba Rahman is caught offside. Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Alberto Moreno. Emre Can (Liverpool) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Tammy Abraham (Chelsea). Attempt saved. Pedro (Chelsea) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Eden Hazard with a through ball. Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) left footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Philippe Coutinho. Substitution, Liverpool. Sheyi Ojo replaces Kolo Touré. César Azpilicueta (Chelsea) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by César Azpilicueta (Chelsea). Corner, Liverpool. Conceded by Baba Rahman. Hand ball by Tammy Abraham (Chelsea). Attempt saved. Emre Can (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Foul by Roberto Firmino (Liverpool). Asmir Begovic (Chelsea) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Liverpool. Conceded by Eden Hazard. Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Substitution, Liverpool. Christian Benteke replaces Adam Lallana. Substitution, Liverpool. Joe Allen replaces James Milner. Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Eden Hazard (Chelsea). Substitution, Chelsea. Tammy Abraham replaces Bertrand Traore. James Milner (Liverpool) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by James Milner (Liverpool). Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Attempt saved. Bertrand Traore (Chelsea) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Pedro. Attempt blocked. James Milner (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Philippe Coutinho. Attempt missed. Nathaniel Clyne (Liverpool) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Attempt blocked. Adam Lallana (Liverpool) right footed shot from the right side of the six yard box is blocked. Assisted by Alberto Moreno with a cross. Emre Can (Liverpool) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Bertrand Traore (Chelsea). Attempt missed. Adam Lallana (Liverpool) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left following a corner. Corner, Liverpool. Conceded by Nemanja Matic. Attempt saved. Pedro (Chelsea) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by César Azpilicueta.
Christian Benteke's late header cancelled out Eden Hazard's brilliant solo goal as Liverpool kept alive their slim hopes of a top-six league finish.
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Ted will tread the boards for the first time with owner Joanne Burrow in a production at Manchester's Opera House. The Yorkshire terrier, who came to Ms Burrow underweight and "in such a state", will play the pet of one of the main characters, Musetta. She said she was sure he would "immensely enjoy" the show. Ted was rescued by Manchester and Cheshire Dogs Home, where Ms Burrow works, at the age of one. She said when he first arrived, she thought he "wouldn't make it", but "now he's such a loving and friendly dog [who] has come out of his shell". She added that he was not "fazed by crowds, noise or light" and would "no doubt immensely enjoy" his time on stage. The contents of a dog waste bin at Hunter's Chase playground was used to cover the playing apparatus on Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday. A Tandridge Council spokesperson warned the acts of vandalism could spread disease among park users. They urged anybody with information about the incidents to contact police. Toxocara canis, a parasite often found in dog faeces, has the potential to cause asthma, epilepsy and blindness in humans. The playground was closed while the area was cleaned. Cocks Moors Woods pool closed on 23 May after the parasite Cryptosporidium, which can cause vomiting and diarrhoea, was found in the water, Birmingham Community Leisure Trust, which runs the pool, said prompt action had been taken to tackle the issue. Caroline Hassan, whose son was hospitalised and was ill for five weeks, said it had "been hell". She said: "He's still suffering and we've had five trips to A&E." The trust said the pool closed on 23 May and would reopen on 4 June. Read more stories for Birmingham Suzanne Lommi, whose two children were ill, claimed the pool in Kings Heath was "cutting corners" with its cleaning. She said: "I was disgusted with the state of the swimming baths, the changing rooms, even the toilets. "There were dirty nappies and there was a strong smell of urine. The pool was very murky." Other people claimed on the pool's Facebook page that the changing rooms were "disgusting". The trust said the bug was "introduced by an external source". A trust spokeswoman said: "Our swimming pool is maintained to a high standard and cleaned regularly throughout the day, and we encourage people to follow hygiene guidelines." All pools were regularly tested by external hygiene specialists, she said, but as it is a rare bug, it was not usually tested. The trust said it was now working alongside Public Health England to ensure the pool was safe. The Equality and Human Rights Commission in Wales accused the UK government of a "communication failure" to let women know their pension age would increase in line with men at 65. In 2011, the government brought the deadline forward from 2020 to 2018. It said letters were sent to the women advising the changes. The age for both men and women will increase further to 66 at the end of the decade. Kate Bennett, Wales' EHRC's national director for Wales, told the BBC's Sunday Politics Wales programme: "What has been a serious problem is the failure to communicate properly with women to let them know the situation. "I'm aware of the fact that women who've planned their retirement for a very long time have suddenly discovered that actually they're not going to get their pension as quickly as they thought and have had to carry on working longer. "This really is a failure on the part of the government and, although we support the change, it should have been implemented much better." The UK government said it had notified the women affected and would not be revisiting the state pension age arrangements. "The cost of prolonging this inequality would be several billions of pounds," it said. Elizabeth Conway, from Tonteg, Rhondda Cynon Taff, retired as a nurse at 58, expecting to start receiving her state pension when she turns 63 this year. "You think that you're going to get your pension at a set age which you could then add to another pension if you've got one and it would give you a reasonably good life but now I have to work and it's quite hard," she said.
A stray dog rescued from a life on the streets is to make his stage debut later in a production of Puccini's classic opera, La Boheme. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Vandals smeared dog faeces on equipment and fencing at a children's playground in South Godstone, Surrey, on three occasions in the space of five days. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Several children have fallen ill after using a Birmingham swimming pool where a chlorine-resistant bug was detected. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The way changes to the state pension age were made has been criticised, with thousands of women claiming they were given "little or no notice".
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The relocation must take place by the Brexit deadline - 30 March 2019. Some countries are bidding to host both the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and European Banking Authority (EBA). It means hundreds of jobs moving from London, along with significant revenue from hotel stays and conferences. The deciding vote will take place in November. The EU 27 agreed on the selection process on Thursday night, after UK Prime Minister Theresa May had left the Brussels summit. The 27 are determined that the UK will pay the relocation bill, as Brexit was a UK decision. The EMA's total number of staff in 2015 was 890, while the EBA's was 189. Both are headquartered in Canary Wharf. The EMA had 36,000 visitors in 2015, and 30,000 hotel nights were booked, the European Council said. EMA EBA The national rivalry over hosting the agencies will be closely watched. It could reveal some wider tensions over Brexit, so it will be an early test of EU unity in the tough Brexit negotiations. In 2001 Italy's then Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi mocked Finland's bid to host the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). "There is absolutely no comparison between culatello (speciality ham) from Parma and smoked reindeer," Mr Berlusconi was quoted as saying. Italy's bid beat Finland's, and the EFSA opened in Parma in 2005. First the European Commission will assess the competing bids and make its recommendations. In November each of the EU foreign ministers will vote in order of preference - three points for the preferred bid, two points for the second-favourite and one point for the third. Accessibility and efficient infrastructure are the top two agreed criteria. But the EU also wants the new hosts to have good "European-oriented" schooling and job opportunities for the families of agency staff. Germany's Spiegel news website joked that the voting would be rather like the Eurovision Song Contest. "That's why the Germans fear equally wretched results," Spiegel said - even though Frankfurt, as HQ of the European Central Bank, would be a logical host for the EBA. A flavour of this new EU "beauty contest" was provided by Austria. Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz said his country "is already a terrific location for many international organisations. "We have wonderful general conditions in Vienna, and that's why I consider that we are a very attractive location." The EU is keen to locate some of its agencies in the newer member states of Central and Eastern Europe - it has stated that as an aim. But their rejection of the EU asylum policy - notably refusing to take in refugees currently in Italy and Greece - may count against them.
EU leaders have officially launched the competition between member states to decide which will host two London-based EU agencies, responsible for medicines and banking.
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The 31-year-old opener, who has appeared in nine Test matches, left Taunton by mutual agreement last month in order to relocate to London. Compton, who previously played for Middlesex between 2001 and 2009, has signed a three-year deal at Lord's. "The time feels right to return home. Hopefully I can come back and reproduce my best cricket here," he said. South Africa-born Compton made his England debut in November 2012 after scoring 1,494 first-class runs for Somerset that summer, but he has not featured for the national team since being dropped for the home Ashes series against Australia in 2013. Following five years at Taunton, he described his return to Middlesex as an "exciting challenge" and has targeted a return to the England set-up. "Leaving Lord's to play for Somerset was, at the time, a step in my development I felt I needed to make," he said. "Whilst at Somerset I grew as a player and a person. I also fulfilled the dream of representing England, which is something I am determined to do again." The grandson of England great Denis Compton, he has scored 9,163 first-class runs at an average of 43.84 since making his debut in 2004, including 22 centuries. Middlesex managing director of cricket Angus Fraser said the right-hander had "a lot to offer" the club on and off the pitch. "Players of Nick's ability do not become available very often and when we were made aware of his desire to move back to London we immediately moved," he added. "With Chris Rogers hopefully playing for Australia next summer we needed to find a high quality top order batsman and in Nick we have secured the services of one. "It will be great to see him once again wearing a Middlesex cap and sweater." Parking at the privately-run visitor and patients car parks was to increase from £7 a day to £15. Staff had complained that they would be worst hit by the rise. Announcing the u-turn, NHS Lothian deputy chief executive Jim Crombie said the health board had listened to the concerns of its staff. He said: "We have discussed with staff the proposal to increase parking charges and we have listened to the concerns they have raised. "We have fed this back to our private sector partners and have agreed that charges will remain at the current level for this financial year. "We understand the impact that travel to and from work can have on staff but also the frustration patients and visitors experience when trying to park to attend an appointment or visit a patient. "We will use the review to explore these issues in detail." NHS Lothian does not own or operate the car park at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. The charges for the car park are set by Consort Healthcare in line with the PFI agreement. Hospital parking charges were abolished by the Scottish government in 2008. Charges were removed from 14 hospitals but could not be scrapeed at three PFI car parks. Parking charges remain at Edinburgh and Glasgow Royal Infirmaries and Ninewells in Dundee. Fourteen people sit on the steering group, hailing from the city's arts, music, business, education and political sectors. The group has until December 2017 to work on its bid to best showcase the city. Leader of the panel Sharon Watson, said the 2023 bid would "belong to the people of Leeds". Ms Watson is artistic director of Phoenix Dance Theatre and trustee for the West Yorkshire Playhouse, The Place and Matthew Bourne's New Adventures. She said the group would have "the drive and the ambition to create a bid that will be a great representation of Leeds". "Leeds is a city with so much to be proud of and this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for us all to show that to the world," she added. Also on the panel is Godfrey Worsdale, director of the Henry Moore Foundation, and Judith Blake, leader of Leeds City Council. Ms Blake said the first meeting was "inspiring" and she expected "a formidable and eclectic bid that will be tough for any city to beat." "It brings home just how rich and varied our city's cultural offering really is," Ms Blake said. Previous UK holders of the title are Glasgow in 1990 and Liverpool in 2008. A Leeds council report said the cost of hosting the title has previously ranged from £14.5m to £58m.
Middlesex have re-signed England Test batsman Nick Compton following his departure from Somerset. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Plans to raise parking charges at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary have been dropped following concerns from staff. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The first meeting has been held to decide on Leeds' bid to become European Capital of Culture 2023.
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Left-arm spinner Simon Kerrigan took 5-59 as the visitors were bowled out for 253 to lose by an innings and 94 runs. Adam Wheater (47) and Will Smith (45) resisted but after Wheater fell, the last five wickets fell for 45 runs. Lancashire have won two of their opening three Championship matches - the same amount of the rest of the top flight put together. This success was largely built on dismissing Hampshire for 109 on the first day, but their push was halted by the loss of two sessions to the weather on day three. On an overcast but uninterrupted final day, the home side were forced to work hard for the eight wickets they required in conditions that offered little to the pace bowlers and on a batting surface that remained true. Resuming on 76-2, 271 behind, Hampshire lost England hopeful James Vince for the addition of eight to his overnight 39, driving to short cover to give James Anderson a third wicket. It could have been argued that Hampshire's best chance of saving the game went with their captain, but the obdurate Smith ate up 213 deliveries before being trapped in front by Kyle Jarvis. Wheater, strong off the back foot, once again batted well, only to be pinned leg before by a quicker one from Kerrigan. From there Kerrigan, giving the ball more air to find increasing amounts of turn, worked through the lower order with the help of leg-spinner Liam Livingstone, who had Tino Best lbw for his maiden first-class wicket. Kerrigan completed his 12th five-wicket haul and the match when Mason Crane top-edged a sweep to leg slip. Hampshire captain James Vince told BBC Radio Solent: "The morning of day one we put ourselves on the back foot and it was always going to be difficult to claw ourselves back into that game. "We showed some glimpses of good cricket, but again we haven't strung it together. To get off to a start like that, it was always going to be incredibly tough to turn it round. "A disappointing result and a disappointing first day especially. But, there are still signs there that we are playing some good cricket and some guys are in good form."
Lancashire completed victory over Hampshire to move into second place in County Championship Division One.
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The strike by members of the UFO union will mainly affect short-haul flights. Lufthansa and the union failed to reach an agreement in a long-running row over early retirement benefits and pensions on Thursday. The airline has been trying to negotiate with various staff groups as part of a savings drive. About 37,500 passengers on flights from Frankfurt and Duesseldorf will be affected by the nine-hour strike, which is scheduled to begin at 13:00 GMT, Lufthansa said. "Of a total 3,000 connections scheduled for today, 290 flights will be cancelled, including 15 intercontinental services," the firm said. Some 10% of all flights in the Lufthansa Group will have to be cancelled, a spokesman told the BBC. Lufthansa Group airlines include Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Germanwings, Eurowings, Brussels Airlines, Air Dolomiti and Cityline. More strike action can be expected on Saturday at Frankfurt, the union said, but Lufthansa's other main hub in Munich will not be at risk of action until after Sunday. Should Lufthansa management not make concessions, the union said it was planning another strike on 13 November. "We regret this course of action, but we see no alternative," union head Nicoley Baublies said. Equinet analyst Jochen Rothenbacher said the strike could cost Lufthansa €20m (£14m) a day, depending on the number of cancellations. Strikes by pilots have already cost Lufthansa about €130m so far this year.
German airline Lufthansa will cancel 290 flights on Friday afternoon because of strike action by cabin crew over cost-saving measures.
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Cobblers' goalkeeper Adam Smith saved shots by Zeli Ismail and Ryan Ledson before Lee Martin's low strike was saved Cambridge's Will Norris. Norris stopped a header by James Collins but John Marquis headed the Cobblers in front soon after. Cambridge had another chance through Ledson before Spencer's strike went into the top corner to earn a point. Northampton increase their lead at the top of League Two to 14 points, while Cambridge are in 12th, five points from the play-offs.
James Spencer grabbed a stoppage-time equaliser for Cambridge United to share a point at leaders Northampton Town.
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Mr Murphy has pledged that a UK-wide "mansion tax" would allow a future Labour government to create 1,000 new nursing posts in Scotland. He said most of the money raised would come from London and the south east. Labour MP Diane Abbott accused him of "unscrupulous" behaviour, but Mr Murphy insisted his plan was "sensible". Mr Murphy compared the plan to spend money levied on English homes on Scottish nurses with the way the oil wealth from the North Sea was shared around the UK. "It's part of pooling and sharing your resources across these islands, it's pretty sensible," he told BBC Radio 4's World at One programme, and pointed out the property tax was Labour Party policy. Labour has pledged to impose what it calls a "mansion tax" - a levy on homes worth more than £2m across the UK to fund the NHS - if leader Ed Miliband wins the general election. In his first major policy announcement, Mr Murphy said he would use Scotland's share of the money, allocated under the Barnett formula, to pay for extra nursing staff, if Labour wins May's UK General Election and then the Scottish Labour Party wins the Holyrood election in 2016. But Ms Abbott, the Labour MP for Hackney who hopes to run for London mayor, told the World at One she was very surprised that Mr Murphy was "making these boasts". With phrases like "fiscally vindictive" and "highly unscrupulous" being hurled around, it's clear that a political row is playing out which is as bitter as it is old. It is being contested on familiar turf: does the rest of the UK, and particularly wealthy London, subsidise Scotland? The front pages of the London editions of The Times and The Daily Telegraph both concentrate on a "pledge" from the Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy, made as he kicked off his campaign for the general election. "Mansion tax to fund nursing in Scotland" is The Times' headline. "Labour tax on 'wealthy English' to fund nurses in Scotland" is the Telegraph's take. Believe it or not, those headlines will suit Mr Murphy. The new leader of the Scottish Labour Party has a tough task. Read more from James "Jim Murphy is saying that he's going to be recruiting nurses from day one on the basis of this mansion tax. You can't recruit people on the basis that money that hasn't even been raised yet," she said. She added: "Jim Murphy is jumping the gun in a highly unscrupulous way." While supporting the mansion tax "in principle", Ms Abbott said a lot of discussion was needed as to how to implement it fairly, warning it amounted to a "tax on Londoners". She said the policy would affect people who bought homes many years ago which have since increased substantially in value, while the wealthy would try to "evade" the tax. "That's all got to be thought through - Jim Murphy isn't waiting for that. He just thinks he can buy Scottish votes with money expropriated from London," she said. Mr Murphy - who Ms Abbott mistakenly called 'John' at the start of the interview - hit back by saying he did not have to consult Ms Abbott or clear things with Labour leader Ed Miliband over what he does in the Scottish Labour Party. "When it comes to issues that are devolved - so health and education in Scotland - I am in charge. I am the leader of the Scottish Labour Party." Reserved issued such as foreign affairs and welfare, he added , were the responsibility of the Labour leader, who he said he looked forward to campaigning alongside for a Labour victory at the general election. Ms Abbott, he suggested, should get behind Labour Policy "rather than either forgetting my name or attacking my approach to what I do in Scotland". Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps said Mr Murphy's comments showed "once again that Ed Miliband simply does not command the respect of his party". A Labour spokesman said the "overwhelming majority" of money raised would be spent in England, "but as with any UK-wide tax, Scotland will receive a share of the proceeds under the Barnett formula". "It is up to the Scottish Government how to spend this revenue," they added. Scottish National Party MP Angus Robertson said: "Fickle attempts to win back trust by playing an arbitrary numbers game with nursing staff and proposing oil funds that Labour should have supported decades ago are wide off the mark - and people will see straight through them." The policy announcement, made by Mr Murphy on Monday, has also faced criticism from some other London-based politicians. Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, described the plan as "fiscally vindictive" to the south east of England and amounted to trying to "bribe the Scots to vote Labour", while Labour's Dame Tessa Jowell said London should not be treated as a "cash cow".
Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy has rejected claims he is trying to "buy" Scottish votes with money "expropriated" from London.
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We Bought a Zoo, starring Matt Damon, is about the Mee family's purchase of Dartmoor Zoo in 2006. Ben Mee, 46, and his children Milo, 10, and Ella, eight, have flown to the Big Apple ahead of the premiere on Monday evening. Mr Mee said: "I have no idea what it's going to be like going up the red carpet." The film follows the story of the Surrey family's purchase of the zoo, which was closed by inspectors before reopening in 2007. It now has 220 animals. Mr Mee said the family had simply been looking for properties when they first had the idea of buying the zoo. "We got the estate agents' details with lots of bedrooms, huge grounds and then, as we turned the pages of the details, lions, tigers, bears and wolves. "Initially we just laughed and thought 'this is insane, nobody would buy a place like this and certainly not us'. "But the more we thought about it, we thought 'someone is going to buy it' and we looked into it and realised that if nobody else bought it then the collection of animals would be largely euthanased." Mr Mee said he hoped the film would entice more visitors to the zoo. "The house down the road, Antony House, was used in the Johnny Depp film Alice in Wonderland and their business increased fivefold. "If we get five times the visitors next year, that will be half a million people, so if half a million people do come here they'll want to stay somewhere. "It should be a huge boost to the region which I'm really pleased about." The film was based on a book written by Mr Mee. The family spent some time in California meeting the actors on the set, although Mr Mee said the red carpet would be a new experience. "If I ever see [on television] a sequence of that sort of thing I turn over. I'm not interested in that whole glam-glitzy thing and I don't know what you're supposed to do." Its new six-week digital marketing drive to be launched in France and Germany next week follows up a Nessie-themed campaign run earlier this year. The latest effort will also target The Netherlands. Called "Tips for Monster Hunting" the new ad campaign includes photographs taken at Plodda Falls at Tomich and the Falls of Foyers, south of Inverness. The previous drive featured Glen Ord Distillery in Muir of Ord and kilted revellers in the Dores Inn at Dores on Loch Ness. Both campaigns were set up with the aim of drawing more visitors to Scotland and the wider UK. South Gloucestershire Council is spending £80,000 on a feasibility study for the junction off Westerleigh Road near Emersons Green. Conservative councillor James Hunt said: "It would decrease the traffic along the ring road which, especially at rush hour, is at crippling levels." Conservatives at the council have lobbied for the junction for 15 years. Campaigners say the ring road between Emersons Green and the M32 gets congested by traffic heading to the M4. If a motorway junction was created at Westerleigh Road it would offer direct access to the M4 and speed up the traffic, supporters of the plan say. Mr Hunt has said this short journey of about two miles (3.2km) can take up to an hour at peak times. "Emersons Green is a highly condensed area with business and houses and we're expecting that to grow in the next few years. "We need some investment in infrastructure to take all of the extra traffic, a lot of people will know the ring road in that area is really very, very busy in the mornings and it can take an awfully long time to reach the M4," added Mr Hunt. The council rejected a new junction in 2000 in favour of improving public transport and cycling routes. Liberal Democrat councillor Pat Hockey, who is her party's lead member on the planning and transport committee, said: "If the feasibility says it won't work and the Highways Agency puts up its hands in horror and says we can't cope with any more traffic on the motorway, then we'll have to take notice." The feasibility study is expected to take a year to complete.
A family from Devon have flown to New York ahead of a film premiere based on their life. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Tourism body VisitBritain has released a new set of tongue-in-cheek tips to finding the Loch Ness Monster. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A campaign to get a new motorway junction at the M4 in north Bristol has secured funding to explore the idea.
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Depay, a £25m signing from PSV in 2015, has played just 20 minutes for United in the Premier League this season. But the 22-year-old came off the bench in Luxembourg to score with a header and free-kick to secure victory. Arjen Robben had given the Dutch the lead only for Maxime Chanot to level with a penalty before the break. Joshua Brenet was deemed to have clipped Daniel da Mota, which gave the defender an opportunity to score from the spot, but it was not enough for a Luxembourg side who have now gone nine matches without a win. The introduction of Depay after the break swung the match in the visitors' favour, moving the Netherlands on to seven points, three behind leaders France, and above third-placed Sweden on goal difference. Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
Manchester United's Memphis Depay scored twice as the Netherlands beat Luxembourg 3-1 in a World Cup qualifier to move second in Group A.
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Super Mario Run will be released in Apple's App Store in December in more than 100 countries. It will be free to download but users will have to pay for the full game. Nintendo, which announced the tie-up at Apple's launch event for the iPhone 7, saw its shares jump 18% before falling back to around a 13% rise. Smartphones are the gaming industry's fastest growing source of revenue and Nintendo has been criticised for being slow on the uptake. However, the Japanese firm co-created the popular Pokemon Go game and released an app called Miitomo earlier this year. It plans to unveil more gaming titles by March 2017. Super Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto said an Android version would also be launched at a later date. Nintendo plans to move Super Mario into movies When Japan's PM appeared as Mario At the Apple launch event, Mr Miyamoto said to loud cheers from the audience, "Mario is running toward his next goal: iPhone." Mobile analyst Jack Kent, of IHS Markit, said: "Mario is one of Nintendo's core properties so it makes sense for it to come to iPhone, if Nintendo is serious about making a success of its mobile strategy." Apple is also jumping on the popularity of online gaming. Gaming phenomenon Pokemon Go will appear on the Apple Watch for the first time. The device will vibrate when users are near Pokemon or Pokestops. Sharrouf left Sydney in 2013 to join the so-called Islamic State. His wife Tara Nettleton and their five young children followed. Photos of their son holding a Syrian soldier's severed head made headlines after they were published last year. Sharrouf is believed to have been killed in a drone strike in June 2015. Ms Nettleton died in September after complications from surgery for pre-existing appendicitis, reports say. According to the reports, Tara Nettleton's mother Karen was only recently informed. Karen Nettleton's lawyer said she was desperate to get her five grandchildren and one great-grandchild out of Syria, and was pleading for the Australian Government to help bring them home. "On my own behalf and on her behalf, I request [they] do everything that they possibly can to get those children away from danger and to get them out and bring them home," her lawyer Charles Waterstreet told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "Tara was a very young girl when she married, [and] now the grandchildren and a young baby are left without anyone to look after them." Sharrouf's teenage daughter, 14, married his friend Mohamed Elomar, also reportedly killed. She is now believed to be the mother of a baby girl. Speaking to Australian media on Thursday, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton described the case as "a very complicated mess". "Ultimately the government's clear objective is to keep the Australian public safe, and we'd have to look at the individual circumstances to see what kids may have been through, what they've been exposed to, whether or not later in life they'd pose a threat," he said.
Shares in Nintendo have surged after the company announced that a new version of its popular Super Mario franchise will be available on iPhone. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The wife of notorious Australian Islamic State militant Khaled Sharrouf has died in Syria, her mother says.
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The device, known as a "body scanner", will replace the existing walk-through airport security metal detector. It uses "millimetre wave technology" to scan passengers in order to detect prohibited items. The Scottish government-owned airport said the device, which is being used by 250 airports worldwide, would be installed in the spring. Prestwick Airport's security manager, Ian Gregory, said: "As part of our ongoing customer commitment, we've listened carefully to passengers' comments. "They asked that the operation at our search facility remains fast, efficient, friendly and stress-free, and the new equipment will help us meet their aspirations. He added: "The technology uses automatic threat recognition software which interprets the scan data instead of creating an image and identifies areas where items may be concealed on the body. "These areas are flagged on a standardised stick-figure on a screen to indicate to the security officer areas of the individual's body which should be checked. "As privacy and confidentiality are paramount, all data relating to the individual is destroyed after the scan is completed." Tunisia international Belaid, 27, can also play in midfield and has signed a two-and-a-half-year deal. Cairns, 23, who has signed a deal until the end of the season, spent the first half of the season with League One Chesterfield. Both players could feature in Saturday's FA Cup third-round tie against Yorkshire rivals Leeds United. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. Markets were also said to be digesting President Donald Trump's plan to review banking regulations. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.1% to end the day at 20,052.42. The S&P 500 fell 0.2% to 2,292.56, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index shed 0.1% to 5,663.55. Oil prices fell following fresh fears that an Opec deal to curb production would fail to prevent over-supply. It hit oil-related stocks, with Devon Energy falling 3.2% and Marathon Oil down 4.1%. At the weekend, Tiffany said Frederic Cumenal had stepped down as its chief executive following a disappointing set of results. Shares in the company ended the day 2.46% lower. Shares in toymaker Hasbro jumped 14.1% after its latest quarterly results beat expectations, helped by strong demand for dolls based on Walt Disney's Cinderella and Frozen. Profits for the three months to 25 December were $192.73m, up from $175.76m a year earlier. The borough council has been working with Avon and Somerset Police to introduce a Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) covering the town centre. PSPOs are a type of power given to local councils to help tackle persistent anti-social behaviour. The new order - which does not apply to pavement cafes or licensed premises - will be enforced from 1 June. The PSPO replaces the "no drinking" order that applies to some areas of Taunton but is far broader, covering the town centre as well as parts of Priorswood Road through to Toneway and Blackbrook Way. Anyone in breach of the order will be committing a criminal offence and could receive a fixed penalty notice or face a fine in court. Last year, Taunton Deane councillors voted unanimously to ban the sale of legal highs in premises rented from the authority. In March, new anti-social behaviour legislation was upheld in a test case involving the closure of a legal highs shop in Taunton, which police said was responsible for serious nuisance and disorder in the town. Taunton is following in the footsteps of Lincoln City Council which introduced a similar scheme in February. Leader of Taunton Deane Council, councillor John Williams, said the order sent "a clear message that unacceptable, anti-social behaviour in Taunton will not be tolerated". Legal highs are similar to illegal drugs but have had their chemistry tweaked, meaning they are not covered by the Misuse of Drugs Act and are legal to sell.
Glasgow Prestwick Airport is to install new X-ray machines and a hi-tech security scanner at a cost of £250,000. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Rotherham have signed Levski Sofia defender Aimen Belaid and free agent goalkeeper Alex Cairns. [NEXT_CONCEPT] US markets ended lower, after oil stocks were hit by a fall in global prices and Tiffany slipped on the departure of its chief executive. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Taunton is to introduce a ban on people taking intoxicating substances including legal highs in public places.
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The Italian, 25, spent last season on loan at AC Milan but has now returned to Liverpool for pre-season training. The former Manchester City striker has scored four goals for the Reds since joining the club in 2014. "He's not at the stage of his career where he should be battling with four or five players for one or two positions," said Klopp. "So it's clear we need a solution. There will be a club who would be happy to have the new Mario Balotelli." Balotelli scored just three goals in a 23-game loan spell at the San Siro last season, and was not named in Italy's Euro 2016 squad. Meanwhile, Klopp says the Reds are eager to resolve the future of Wales midfielder Joe Allen, who has a year left on his deal. Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. They include former Ch Supt David Duckenfield who faces 95 charges of manslaughter by gross negligence following the 1989 disaster. Former Ch Supt Donald Denton and former Det Ch Insp Alan Foster are accused of perverting the course of justice. A decision on whether to grant funding had not been made, South Yorkshire's police and crime commissioner said. Sir Norman Bettison, a former South Yorkshire Police chief inspector who is charged with misconduct in public office, has not currently applied for public funding. Last year, fresh inquests into the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans concluded they were unlawfully killed following a crush at an FA Cup semi-final match. The inquests also found Liverpool supporters were not responsible for the dangerous situation at the Leppings Lane turnstiles of Sheffield Wednesday's Hillsborough stadium. A spokesman for Alan Billings, South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), said: "The PCC has received applications for legal funding from three former officers facing prosecution. "He will consider all applications for funding on their own merits and no decision will be made without solicitors providing full information in support of the applications, including an estimate of the amount of costs that are likely to be involved." Current government guidance states it is up to individual police authorities to decide whether, and to what extent, financial assistance is made available to officers in criminal proceedings. The Home Office said this guidance was currently under review, with the South Yorkshire PCC confirming any changes "may impact on the final decision" of the applications. Previously code-named Project Scorpio - take a look at the new Xbox One X console. Phil Spencer, head of Xbox, said it was the "most powerful console ever made." The console was revealed at this year's E3 conference - one of the world's biggest gaming and technology shows. It runs from 13 to 15 June in Los Angeles, America. The console will feature six teraflops of processing power. A single teraflop can make a trillion calculations or 'floating point operations' per second. To keep the console from overheating, there's a supercharger-style fan and a vapour chamber, where cooling liquid helps the engine stay cool. The console will be able to play games in super high quality 4K. How does it compare to the PS4 Pro and the Nintendo Switch? Xbox One games and accessories will still be compatible with the new console. It is also the smallest Xbox console yet. A slimmer, cheaper version of the console named the Xbox One S was also announced. The head of Xbox games marketing Aaron Greenburg has said it will "change the way we think about the future of console gaming." However, the PS4 Pro console also has 4K graphics and has been out since November last year. People have criticised the new Xbox, saying you wouldn't really notice a difference in the quality of the new console, unless you have a high-quality 4K TV and surround sound system to do the new hardware justice. The console will be released on 7 November and will cost $499 - or £449 in the UK. Other announcements this year include the brand new Super Mario Odessy game and Splatoon 2. Aleksejus Zarskus, 42, died in hospital last Thursday after an incident in King Street on Sunday 15 January. Janis Karajevs, 30, was charged with murder at Aberdeen Sheriff Court. He made no plea and was remanded in custody. The family of Mr Zarskus earlier said in a statement: "Aleksejus was a much-loved twin brother and a cherished son and family member."
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has told striker Mario Balotelli to find a new club. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Three ex-police officers charged over the Hillsborough disaster have applied for public funds for their legal fees. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Microsoft have revealed their brand-new top-secret console at a big game show in America. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has appeared in court charged with murder after a death in Aberdeen.
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Swansea Harrier Matthew Rees stopped to help Chorlton Runners athlete David Wyeth who collapsed on The Mall. He took him under his arm and walked him the 300m to the finish. Chorlton Runners chairman Neal Wainwright said Mr Rees was "a credit to his club" and had their "eternal thanks". In a letter on behalf of the club to Mr Rees, Mr Wainwright said the "outpouring of immediate gratitude" on the club's social media was testament to his actions. He said the club was built on respect, with members showing "a level of support to all runners regardless of ability". He said seeing Mr Wyeth "in distress at such an agonising stage of the race" made the club hope one of their runners was close by to help, but the next runner was five minutes behind. He told Mr Rees: "By complete chance you were a few seconds behind him and displayed the characteristics that any running club in the UK would be immensely proud of". Mr Wainwright said club members had been impressed with Mr Rees' post race interviews, where he spoke "candidly about the fact that these races are often filled with moments of kindness". "For the many runners who could have stopped, it was only you who chose to. For that reason, you have our eternal thanks," Mr Wainwright added. In recognition of "sacrificing his race", Chorlton Runners has decided to pay for Mr Rees' entry to the 2018 London Marathon, along with first class travel and accommodation. "We hope that you will accept this small gesture and as one we hope it proves to be a wonderful race for you," added Mr Wainwright. "We will of course try our very best to ensure none of our runners require your assistance on the day and rest assured should you experience any difficulties of your own there will be no shortage of black and gold vested runners eager to help." Mr Rees has played down his heroics, saying "anyone would have done the same thing". Each of the dogs had to be put down after being walked in Forthquarter Park in Granton. Two of the animals suffered internal bleeding. The City of Edinburgh Council's environmental health team said there were no plans to close the park to the public. A spokesman for the council said: "We have found no evidence so far to link the deaths of any dogs with Forthquarter Park. "Preliminary investigations are still continuing, but the park will not be closing." Concerns about the dogs' deaths were initially raised by the Friends of West Pilton group. After learning of the deaths of six dogs with links to the park, they alerted the council and local politicians. The park is owned by the National Grid and sits beside a former gasworks. Extensive ground decontamination work was carried out before the park opened 10 years ago.
A running club will pay for a Swansea man to run the 2018 London Marathon after he helped one of its members over the finish line at this year's event. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An investigation into the deaths of six dogs in Edinburgh has found no evidence so far of a link with a local park, according to the city's council.
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Hani Khalaf, 21, an Egyptian national of no fixed address, will be tried for the murder of Jairo Medina, 62, in February. The body of the professional carer, from Chelsea, was found in Hyde Park near Speakers' Corner on 12 August. At the Old Bailey, Mr Khalaf was remanded in custody. He is expected to enter a plea in November. A post-mortem examination of Mr Medina did not establish a cause of death.
A man accused of murdering a carer at a tourist hotspot in central London will go on trial next year.