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Speaking to Barron's, he said he had "always been an investment guy" and the "hiring, paying people, planning and so on" became a problem for him. Mr Gross told the financial magazine that "managing money is in my blood". The co-founder of Pimco left abruptly last week to join rival Janus Capital. It has been reported that he was at odds with the executive committee of Pimco, the world's largest bond fund, which is owned by the German insurer Allianz. In his interview, Mr Gross says he's grateful to Janus's chief executive for "putting this [job opportunity] together so quickly, in a matter of 24 to 48 hours at most, and I don't intend to disappoint". While at Pimco, Mr Gross was seen as a key figure, and since his departure investors have withdrawn record amounts of money. The Total Return bond fund, which was managed by Mr Gross, lost more than 10% of its assets in September. "I like to get up at 5:30 in the morning and make money for clients and compete against other money managers. That's something that doesn't go away. "I am obsessed with delivering value to investors and winning the game from a personal standpoint. Retiring at this point in my career just doesn't suit me," he states in the Barron's interview. He has been given control of a much smaller fund at Janus, worth $13 million (£8m), in which he says it will be easier to implement ideas than in the $200bn (£125bn) portfolio he used to run. "The bond paparazzi will be less interested in Janus than they were in Total Return," he says. Asked where he sees bond investment opportunities at the moment, he points to Mexico, saying it is "a pretty safe emerging market," with half the debt level of the US and interest rates around 6%. The winger helped Great Britain win the World Cup in 1954, at the age of 20, and again in 1960. He set the record for the most GB caps with 46 - later equalled by Garry Schofield - and scored 41 tries. His club career saw him play for Huddersfield, Wigan - with whom he won the Challenge Cup in 1958 and 1959, St Helens and York, whom he also coached. Sullivan was also part of Wigan's Championship-winning team of 1960 and later played in Australia, serving as captain and coach of Junee in the Group 9 competition in southern New South Wales from 1966-68. One of only 25 members of the Rugby League Hall of Fame, Sullivan was last week admitted to Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield, where he died on Tuesday. Schofield tweeted: "Very sad news. Rest in peace, legend."
In his first interview since leaving the bond fund Pimco, former boss Bill Gross has said he is 'uniquely exuberant' at leaving management responsibilities behind in his new job. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two-time World Cup winner Mick Sullivan has died at the age of 82 after a long illness.
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Tahir Elci was killed in a gun battle between police and unidentified gunmen. Two police officers also died. He had been making a statement calling for an end to violence between the Turkish state and the Kurdish rebel group the PKK when he was shot dead. Police in Istanbul fired water cannon to disperse crowds demonstrating against Mr Elci's death. A curfew has now been imposed in the neighbourhood where Mr Elci was shot. Mr Elci, who was head of the Diyarbakir Bar Association, had previously been detained and received death threats after saying the separatist PKK should not be regarded as a terrorist organisation. In July violence resumed in the conflict between the army and the PKK after a ceasefire collapsed. Dozens have been killed in violent clashes since. "We do not want guns, clashes and operations here", Mr Elci was saying before being shot. "The moment the statement ended, the crowd was sprayed with bullets," a local official from the pro-Kurdish HDP party, Omer Tastan, told Reuters. The US embassy in Ankara said it was "shocked" at Mr Elci's "tragic death", calling him a "a courageous defender of human rights". The incident sparked instant protests in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Diyarbakir. A crowd on Istanbul's central Istiklal Street chanted "We are all Tahir Elci" and "You can't kill us all," accusing the state of complicity in the attack. Government supporters said Mr Elci was killed in a PKK attack while opponents blamed Turkish nationalists, talking of a "planned assassination", says the BBC's Mark Lowen in Turkey. A Turkish government official said in a written statement: "We are determined to shed light on today's fatal incident in Diyarbakir. An official investigation has been launched and we have assigned four inspectors to this case. "At this time, we believe that Mr Elci may have been caught in the crossfire but we aren't ruling out the possibility that a third party directly targeted him." President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the incident justified the state's "fight against terrorism".
A prominent pro-Kurdish lawyer and rights activist has been shot dead in Diyarbakir, south-eastern Turkey.
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The loyalist paramilitary group's campaign also claimed the lives of 33 people in bomb attacks in Dublin and Monaghan in 1974. The UVF was formed in 1966 to combat what it saw as a rise in Irish nationalism centred on the 50th anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising. It adopted the name and symbols of the original UVF, the movement founded in 1912 by Sir Edward Carson to fight against Home Rule. Many UVF men joined the 36th Ulster Division of the British Army and died in large numbers during the Battle of the Somme in July 1916. Fifty years later, the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Captain Terence O'Neill, would rush back from a commemorative service at the Somme to ban the UVF. It had been formed a few months earlier with the express intention of executing "mercilessly and without hesitation" known IRA men. Their first three victims, a Protestant woman and two Catholic men, had no connections with the IRA. It was the murder of barman Peter Ward, the third victim, which brought the UVF and its leader Gusty Spence to public attention. Spence was convicted of Ward's murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison. The new UVF opposed the liberal reforms being introduced by PM O'Neill. In March and April 1969 they bombed water and electricity installations as part of a broader political campaign to force O'Neill to resign. The bombings were blamed on the IRA. O'Neill resigned at the end of April. According to the book Lost Lives, between 1966 and 1999 the UVF and an affiliate group, the Red Hand Commando, killed 547 people. Many were killed in high-profile attacks. In December 1971 they planted a bomb at McGurk's bar in Belfast killing 15. By the mid-1970s a vicious UVF unit known as the Shankill Butchers was engaged in horrific sectarian killings. In May 1974, the UVF was suspected of planting bombs in Dublin and Monaghan killing 33 people and in 1975 they shot dead three members of the Miami Show Band. In October 1975, the UVF was undermined when soldiers and police swooped on houses in Belfast and East Antrim and arrested 26 men. The following March they were sentenced to a total of 700 years in prison. The police got more evidence in 1983 when a UVF commander turned informer. In October 1994, the Combined Loyalist Military Command, which included the UVF, called a ceasefire. Gusty Spence made the announcement, expressing "abject and true remorse" to all innocent victims of loyalist violence. The UVF's political wing, the Progressive Unionist Party, played a prominent role in the peace process and supported the 1998 Belfast Agreement. Since 1996, the UVF has been embroiled in a feud with the Loyalist Volunteer Force. In August 2000 a murderous feud broke out between the UVF and the UDA's C Company, led by Johnny Adair, on Belfast's lower Shankill Road. By the time a truce was negotiated in December 2000, seven men had died as a result of the feud and hundreds of families were displaced. In 2007 the organisation declared that it was renouncing violence. In June 2009, it decommissioned weapons as witnessed by the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning (IICD) led by General John de Chastelain. On 28 May 2010 Loyalist Bobby Moffett, 43, was shot dead on the Shankill Road, in Belfast. The Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC) said it had been a "public execution" sanctioned by UVF leaders. In its report IMC said the UVF could have prevented the murder but did not. Mr Moffett was perceived to have flouted UVF authority, the report said. The IMC concluded: "The murder represents a serious backward step after a period when all paramilitary groups other than dissident republicans had moved decisively away from violence." However, the IMC said it hoped the incident was a one-off, and the report did not recommend any sanctions against the UVF or its political wing, the Progressive Unionist Party (PUP). In June 2010 the leader of the Progressive Unionist Party, Dawn Purvis, resigned from the party. She said she was leaving because the PUP was "severely restricted because of its relationship with the Ulster Volunteer Force". It followed controversy over the shooting of loyalist Moffett which has been blamed on members of the UVF. Rioting On June 2011 one of the worst nights of rioting East Belfast had seen in years took place. Trouble erupted after a group of masked loyalists wearing surgical gloves attacked catholic homes on the Mountpottinger Road end of Short Strand. A press photographer was shot and several other men were injured. It is believed trouble was sparked by a number of factors. Some loyalists had felt that they had been unfairly targeted by the Historical Enquiries Team (HET) in a series of investigations into murders during the troubles. Some loyalists have also been angered by restrictions placed on a number of parades, including a parade in east Belfast in recent weeks. But the main catalyst is believed to be a power struggle between the UVF leadership in east Belfast and the rest of the organisations leadership.
During the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the Ulster Volunteer Force murdered more than 500 people.
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Officers targeted several addresses, "predominantly in the county of Conwy," police said. Dyfed-Powys Police, the National Crime Agency and North Wales Police were all involved in the operation and armed officers assisted as a precaution. The men were all arrested in Llandudno Junction and are in custody while investigations continue.
Five people have been arrested in a series of drug trafficking raids.
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Special envoy Staffan de Mistura said more than 40 groups had been invited to attend one-on-one meetings over the next five to six weeks. Iran and Turkey have also been invited, but jihadist militant groups have not. Mr de Mistura described it as a stock-taking process, saying there would be no big roundtable discussions. The last round of peace talks in Geneva collapsed in early 2014 with the government refusing to discuss opposition demands. The talks in Geneva are being billed by the UN as low-key consultations rather than real negotiations, reports the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in the Swiss city. The goal is to find areas where negotiation, even on a modest temporary ceasefire in some towns, might be possible, she says. "These are not yet peace talks," Mr de Mistura stressed at a news conference, acknowledging that the chances of success were slim. None of the different groups will meet one another. Instead, representatives of "a broad spectrum of youth, political and military actors, women, victims, civil society, diaspora, religious and community leaders", as well as 20 countries, will have individual meetings with the special envoy. Mr de Mistura said there was "no cut-off date" and that at the end of June he would "assess progress" and "decide on the next steps". The Swedish-Italian diplomat said he wanted to identify possible negotiating positions and try to "operationalise" the 2012 Geneva Communique, an internationally-backed agreement that called for the establishment of a transitional governing body in Syria formed on the basis of mutual consent. Although the UN is seeking a political solution based on the communique, Mr de Mistura noted that it had neither become reality nor had there been a serious discussion on how to implement it. Even before the consultations began on Tuesday, doubts were being expressed, our correspondent says. Some opposition groups were angry that Iran - President Bashar al-Assad's staunch ally - had been invited, claiming it showed Mr de Mistura was too close to the Syrian government. Jihadist groups like Islamic State and al-Nusra Front, al-Qaeda's affiliate in Syria, will also not be there as they are designated as terrorist organisations by the UN. But some diplomats point out that given the power these two groups have on the ground in Syria, any peace deal would have to involve them somehow, our correspondent adds. The dead included a married couple and their one-year-old son, officials said. It happened on Saturday in Veracruz state, and there are warnings that rivers may flood in the neighbouring state of Puebla. They were not Storm Earl's first victims. At least nine people died on Monday as it gathered in the Caribbean. Six of the victims were passengers on board a bus that caught fire in the Dominican town of Nagua when it was hit by tumbling power lines. Three people drowned in Haiti when their tour boat capsized. Earl moved westward and struck Belize as a Category One hurricane on Thursday. The hurricane then weakened to a tropical storm and passed over Guatemala and parts of Mexico. It has now been downgraded from a storm to a tropical depression and wind speeds dropped to 30mph (48km/h) by Saturday, but the effects of the large amounts of rainfall it unleashed are continuing. Some villages in Mexico have been cut off as bridges have been torn up by swollen rivers. The town of Coscomatepec, where the young family died, has been hit by a similar tragedy before. In 2013 a landslide took the lives of 13 people, including eight children and six members of one family. Local media (in Spanish) reported that some families had predicted that there might be another landslide and asked the government for help relocating away from the base of hills and building defence walls. The official response was reportedly that there was no money to re-house them.
The UN has begun consultations with Syrian government and opposition officials as it seeks to find enough common ground to restart peace talks. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Six people died in eastern Mexico when their homes were buried under landslides caused by heavy rain in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Earl.
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Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had earlier announced that the ban would be gradually imposed across the state in the next six months. But he advanced the deadline on Tuesday, saying "now was the right time for social change in Bihar". The ban was one of Mr Kumar's campaign promises during last year's assembly elections. Mr Kumar said he decided to go for a complete ban after he received "great support" from the public in the first four days of a ban on locally-brewed alcohol. "In the first four days of the ban on country liquor [locally-brewed alcohol], it has become a social movement... And so I feel this is the right time for social change in Bihar," the NDTV website quoted him as saying. Mr Kumar's decision has been supported by all political parties in the state as 243 lawmakers have taken a pledge to "stay away from alcohol". The ban has received support from women because they generally link drinking by men with domestic violence, harassment and poverty. But reports say Bihar, which is one of the most backward states in India, will lose nearly 50bn rupees ($752m; £529m) in tax collection due to the ban. Alcohol is completely banned in the western state of Gujarat while the southern state of Kerala and some other Indian states have imposed a partial ban.
Authorities in the eastern Indian state of Bihar have announced a complete ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol.
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Maro Itoje, James Haskell, Anthony Watson and Jack Nowell return after missing the autumn internationals through injury, while there is a first call-up for Bath prop Nathan Catt. Mako and Billy Vunipola miss the camp because of injury, while Joe Launchbury is also not fit. Head coach Eddie Jones will confirm his Six Nations squad on 20 January. "This short two-day camp in Brighton allows us to do some of the organisational work we need to do for the Six Nations," said Jones. Leicester centre Tuilagi, 25, has been beset by injuries in the last couple of years and only recently returned to action after two months out with a groin problem. Forwards: Josh Beaumont (Sale Sharks), Nathan Catt (Bath Rugby), Dan Cole (Leicester Tigers), Charlie Ewels (Bath Rugby), Jamie George (Saracens), Teimana Harrison (Northampton Saints), Dylan Hartley (Northampton Saints), James Haskell (Wasps), Nathan Hughes (Wasps), Maro Itoje (Saracens), George Kruis (Saracens), Courtney Lawes (Northampton Saints), Joe Marler (Harlequins), Matt Mullan (Wasps), Chris Robshaw (Harlequins), Kyle Sinckler (Harlequins), Tommy Taylor (Wasps), Mike Williams (Leicester Tigers), Tom Wood (Northampton Saints). Backs: Mike Brown (Harlequins), Danny Care (Harlequins), Elliot Daly (Wasps), Owen Farrell (Saracens), George Ford (Bath Rugby), Jonathan Joseph (Bath Rugby), Alex Lozowski (Saracens), Jonny May (Gloucester Rugby), Jack Nowell (Exeter Chiefs), Ben Te'o (Worcester Warriors), Manu Tuilagi (Leicester Tigers), Anthony Watson (Bath Rugby), Marland Yarde (Harlequins), Ben Youngs (Leicester Tigers). For the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.
Manu Tuilagi has been named in a 33-man England training squad for a two-day camp in Brighton next week.
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Last year the Polish government approved a threefold increase in logging in the protected Bialowieza forest, home to bison and rare birds. Unesco, EU officials and green activists protested against it. The European Commission, which is taking legal action against Warsaw, asked the European Court of Justice to impose the provisional ban. Environmental activist group ClientEarth welcomed the decision, saying continued logging would cause "serious and irreparable damage to this priceless natural environment". The group's lawyer said: "In the history of the EU, emergency measures like this ban have only been used three times in nature conservation issues. "So far there is no case in which an interim measure of the court was not respected. If Polish authorities do not follow that decision, it will be a serious conflict with the EU law." Poland's Environment Minister Jan Szyszko says the logging could help to curb a bark beetle infestation. The European Commission says it puts endangered species at risk. If Poland loses the main ongoing case, it will be liable for multimillion euro fines. The court will meet in a few months to determine whether the injunction will remain in place while the European Commission's case on the matter continues, a spokeswoman told the BBC. The forest is a Unesco world heritage site that straddles Poland's border with Belarus. Speaking on The Radio 1 Breakfast Show with Nick Grimshaw, the singer said she didn't want to move on. "It's because it makes me appreciate the good times," she said. "Life is a rollercoaster and the lower you are the higher you'll go." Last month, the former N-Dubz singer was found guilty of assaulting a man at a music festival. The 26-year-old denied hitting celebrity blogger Savvas Morgan at the V Festival in Chelmsford, Essex, in August last year. She was ordered to pay £3,020, including £2,700 legal costs, a £200 fine and £100 compensation. Four days earlier, the N-Dubz singer and former X Factor judge's trial over drug dealing claims collapsed. After two court trials in one year, Tulisa said her fans helped her get through it. "My fan base were really supportive and stayed with me throughout, others just left me when the trial kicked off," she told Radio 1. "But when they found out what really happened, people came up to me in the street to support me. "I feel like the bad times have fired me up, you have to turn negativity into positivity." It's two years since the singer has released any music. In 2012, after a stint on X Factor as a judge, she released her debut solo album The Female Boss, but it received poor first week sales. Before that she was in N-Dubz for 11 years, the Camden-based hip-hop group, with her cousin Dappy and their friend Fazer. She says things are good between her and Fazer despite the group splitting up in 2011 and he helped with her new single Living Without You. "I'm back now and it's all about my music," she said. But don't expect an album anytime soon. "I have probably got enough material, but at the moment I'm just going to focus on singles. It will be single, single, banger after banger." And she also played down rumours surrounding a possible appearance on I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! "Those rumours come up every year," she said. "I'm a musician. I've done TV but I've never really been a reality TV star and it's not the route I'm looking to go down and when I do TV I want it to be connected to music. "I couldn't do it anyway, I wouldn't last five minutes. "I can't even handle a spider in my bath tub. I'm scared of the dark and I've got ultimate epic bug phobia." Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
Europe's top court has ordered Poland to immediately stop large-scale logging in Europe's oldest forest. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Tulisa Contostavlos is philosophical about her year from hell but says she likes to be reminded about it.
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March saw 492,774 new cars registered, 6% up on the same time last year and the best monthly figure since August 1998, said the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). The UK car industry has been growing for three years in a row, helped by a strong export market. March is typically a strong month for car registrations, as it is when new number plates are released. Sales were buoyed by low interest rates and sales of new offerings such as fuel-efficient cars. The best selling model in March was the Ford Fiesta, with 27,034 sold. SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes said: "The best month this century for new car registrations is a welcome boost for the UK's thriving automotive sector. The challenge for a new government and industry will be to maintain this momentum and to strengthen Britain's manufacturing capabilities through continued investment, innovation and policies which maintain our global competitiveness. "Whatever the general election result, the new government must keep up the commitment to the sector, which is delivering at home and abroad." Privately registered petrol cars continue to make up most of the cars sold, although there has been a 62% rise in alternatively fuelled vehicles compared with 2014. In 2014, the UK made £26.2bn from car exports. In his first general election event in Wales, Mr Corbyn visited Cardiff North - a seat Labour wants to recapture from the Conservatives. The leader used the event to heap praise on the Welsh Government. But Welsh Tory leader Andrew RT Davies claimed the Welsh Labour team would be "gritting its teeth" during the visit. Mr Corbyn was joined by First Minister Carwyn Jones, as well as Cardiff North AM Julie Morgan. Speaking on Whitchurch Common to a crowd of around 700, Mr Corbyn said: "I urge you to come with us on this journey of hope and excitement, not this journey of fear and misery which is all the Tories offer." Mr Corbyn said the UK government was slicing the money from normal state schools for free and grammar schools. He criticised the UK government for cutting the Welsh budget. "In Wales it is different, because you've got a government that is determined to properly fund education and give every child an opportunity," he said. Friday's event came after Mr Corbyn said children were being crammed "like sardines" into "super-sized" school classes in England, as Labour focused its general election campaign on education. But the Tories called the comments "a massive own goal", saying the Labour-led Welsh Government had overseen increases in class sizes in Wales. Education in Wales is devolved and Liberal Democrat Education Secretary Kirsty Williams has announced a £36m fund to reduce infant class sizes in Wales. In the wideranging speech, Mr Corbyn said seven years of the Tory government and the earlier coalition had brought "greater poverty, greater insecurity, greater misery", and that Labour was the party of hope and opportunity. He said Labour would maintain the triple-lock on pensions, while he claimed big firms would not be allowed "cosy" tax negotiations with HM Revenue and Customs. Mr Corbyn was surrounded by a large crowd of well-wishers and supporters as he left the scene. Welsh Labour leader Carwyn Jones said Labour would create a "fairer society" after 8 June. "The time has come for change," he said. But Welsh Conservative leader Andrew RT Davies said: "After nearly two decades in government, Labour's record is a smorgasbord of failure evidenced by Wales having the worst-performing education system in the UK, the lowest take-home pay, and the longest hospital waiting times." Jonathan Edwards, Carmarthenshire East and Dinefwr Plaid Cymru MP, said: "Given the current weakness and chaos plaguing Labour, the prospect of a UK Labour government is a complete fantasy." Meanwhile, Rhondda MP Chris Bryant said he was "fully supporting" the leader, despite being a vocal critic when he was voted into the role. Make no bones about it - it would have been a good boost for Mr Corbyn to see so many hundreds of his supporters turn out in Cardiff. But it is not enough for him to rely on the votes of Labour supporters. Take a place like Cardiff North, where the Conservatives have a got a majority of 2,137 votes. It is those voters that it will need to attract, that will sometimes vote Labour, sometimes vote for the Conservatives.
The UK has seen its highest monthly level of new car sales this century. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jeremy Corbyn has led a rally of hundreds of supporters in Cardiff - calling for voters to join him on a journey of "hope and excitement".
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The number of non-EU migrants who come to the UK to study but remain five years later could be about half that ministers claim, say researchers. The "current self-destructive policy is deterring genuine international students", says the Institute for Public Policy Research. Ministers say it is crucial to crack down on immigration abuse. Ministers say official statistics suggest that each year about 91,000 non-EU students do not leave the UK at the end of their studies. This figure is an extrapolation of data from the International Passenger Survey (IPS) carried out annually by the Home Office on a sample of travellers at UK ports, says the IPPR. Arrivals who plan to stay more than a year are asked their main reason for coming to the UK - and people who leave after more than a year are asked what they were doing while they were in the UK. For students, the difference between the two figures is about 90,000 - so reducing this figure would help the government in its objective of cutting overall net migration. But this approach is based on "dubious evidence", says the report. Other ways of counting international students put the figure at less than half that suggested by the passenger survey, say the researchers: "The large discrepancy between the other sources' figures and that of the IPS suggest that the latter's 90,000 figure is not reliable enough to be used as a guide for policy," says the report. "While it is certainly right to root out abuse and tackle bogus colleges where there is robust evidence of wrongdoing, these rules have adversely affected genuine students and institutions, and have undermined the UK's reputation as a desirable destination for international students," it adds. "Our research suggests that many of the students they are targeting may be phantom students who are no longer in the country," said report author Marley Morris. The report urges the government to: Seamus Nevin, head of employment and skills policy at the Institute of Directors, agreed it was time for the government to re-evaluate its approach to international students. "Restrictive student and post-study visa rules undermine the UK's claim to be an open, outward facing, trading nation," he said. "Most students who come to the UK to study are not permanent migrants." And the umbrella group Universities UK urged the government to view international students as "valuable temporary visitors". A Home Office spokesman said: "We continue to welcome the brightest and best to our world-class institutions. We are also committed to bringing net migration down to sustainable levels as soon as possible and are looking at all visa routes as part of that work." United will play Ajax - who will get a similar allocation for the 24 May final - after edging past Celta Vigo. The rest of the tickets went on general sale and to local organisers, national associations, commercial partners, broadcasters and corporate hospitality. There will be no screenings of the game in Stockholm for fans without tickets. The only United supporters eligible to apply for a ticket will be season ticket holders who have attended every cup game this season and season ticket or executive ticket holders who have applied for a ticket for an away game in Europe at some point over the past two seasons. Even then, United - who have written to fans to say the likely allocation will be between 8,000 to 9,500 - expect to have far more applications than tickets. Last year's final at Basel's St Jakob-Park, which has a capacity of 35,000, saw Liverpool and Sevilla allocated 10,236 tickets each. The tennis star said he doesn't "regret giving an opinion" but is disappointed with the way he tweeted on the day of the vote. He said the UK was going to be stronger and looked forward to competing for Great Britain for the rest of his career. Murray said everyone should be allowed an opinion but he wanted to "move on". We look at what he really meant in his interview in China. Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
The government might be targeting "phantom students" in its efforts to control migration, a study suggests. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Manchester United will receive no more than 9,500 tickets for the Europa League final in the 50,000-capacity Friends Arena in Stockholm. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Andy Murray has spoken for the first time since he came out in favour of Scottish independence.
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"I don't know about you, but it only takes two words to make me smile," David Cameron told the party faithful at this year's Tory conference. "Exit poll." It had, the prime minister told them, been a night of extraordinary advances, and "as dawn rose, a new light - a bluer light - fell across our isles". Not only did the Conservatives gain an outright majority - their first in more than 20 years - but they picked up seats in parts of the country that had long been held by Labour, bringing 74 new Conservative MPs to Parliament. So how did they do it? Some have attributed the party's gains in the North of England to Chancellor George Osborne's Northern Powerhouse strategy. "It's a great time to be a Tory in the North," Chris Green, the new Conservative MP for Bolton West, told BBC Radio 4's The World at One. "Economic recovery, so many other positive things going on, and especially for a town like Bolton, with a proud manufacturing history, and the chancellor and the prime minister talking about the Northern Powerhouse so much, I think goes down very well. Now it's about making the vision of that powerhouse a reality." The Conservative brand is still toxic in many parts of Northern England - and Mr Osborne has been accused of cynically using the Northern Powerhouse as a cover for big cuts to local government funding. But the plan is not just about money - it is about devolving decision-making, on things like health and transport, from Whitehall to closer to where the cash is spent, under the leadership of an elected mayor. And it is Labour council leaders who are working with the chancellor to deliver this vision - and a Labour politician, former transport secretary Lord Adonis, who has been given the task of overseeing the infrastructure projects that will be crucial to its success. Indeed, some of the most sceptical noises about the Northern Powerhouse have come from Conservatives, wary of extra layers of government that will potentially be dominated by their political opponents. "When new models of local government are seen to be imposed on areas, even if more carrot than stick is used, there the danger lurks," Will Wragg, the new Conservative MP for Hazel Grove, in Greater Manchester, told MPs. Veteran backbencher Graham Brady, who used to be the only Conservative MP in Greater Manchester, says: "I think at the moment we simply have to wait and see. "We have to hope, of course, that we end up with a mayor in Greater Manchester who is a sensible, moderate individual who will try and bring the city together rather than being divisive. If that happens then it could be a real step forward and I live in hope. "But I would have liked to have seen some safeguards that sadly aren't there." Another Northern Conservative MP was far more critical, telling me, on condition of anonymity, that the Northern Powerhouse was a vanity project and a piece of rhetoric. As such, they said, it might as well be the hot air that drives the pistons in Manchester's museums. Former Deputy Prime Minister Lord Heseltine - who led government efforts to regenerate Liverpool in the wake of the Toxteth riots in the 1980s and now advises the government on devolution - admits the party has got some persuading to do. "When I was first involved in active politics, we ran all those cities," he says. "There's no doubt the Conservative Party has not found it easy to articulate its philosophy and its policies. I was often asked when I was in Liverpool why do you bother, there are no votes for us there. "First of all it was right to bother. And secondly, if you are seen to be bothering in areas which are not traditionally your heartlands, it influences the judgment of people on a much wider constituency basis, often way away from the actually affected areas." It is difficult to gauge how much impact the Northern Powerhouse actually had at the ballot box in May - a poll by Comres, for the BBC, found two thirds of voters in the North of England had never heard of it. But its hard hat-wearing architect, George Osborne, now has his eyes on a different election - the one to choose a successor to David Cameron, which is set to happen before 2020. Could he do it? "There will be a leadership campaign. I don't know who's going to enter and I don't certainly know who's going to win," says Lord Heseltine. "But I know one thing about the Conservative Party. It is the most successful political force in the history of democracy. It has held power longer than any other equivalent anywhere in the world. "They have a nose for power and winning it. I doubt if it will desert them."
It was the speech he never imagined he would make, after an election win no one had predicted.
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Workers will stage five days of strikes from Monday in a dispute over jobs, pensions and branch closures. The industrial action will affect Crown Post Offices - the larger branches usually located on High Streets. But Dave Ward of the Communication Workers Union said it was "now or never". "[We have to do this] if we want to make a difference," he said. "We already know that the government and the company are going to announce a further tranche of closures in January," he told the BBC's Today programme. The Communication Workers Union (CWU) said the walkout would start on Monday 19 December and include Christmas Eve. But the Post Office said despite the walkout it would be "business as usual" with "at least" 97% of its 11,600 branches not involved. A spokesperson from Royal Mail said: "If any industrial action takes place in Post Office Ltd, Royal Mail will be operating as normal. We expect there to be no or little effect on the services we provide to our customers. "Royal Mail customers will also continue to have access to Royal Mail services including pre-paid parcel drop-off through over 1,200 customer service points at delivery offices nationwide." In April 2016, the Post Office announced plans to transfer up to 61 branches into WH Smith stores over the following year. It said the move was part of a 10-year plan to cut costs and save cash, and would act as a way of "safeguarding the future of the network." "Our members want the Post Office management to pause its closure and privatisation programme, hold off on its planned pensions changes, and commit to sitting down with us and with the other key stakeholders of this Great British institution and, together, construct a lasting vision," said CWU assistant secretary Andy Furey. The Post Office said it was "extremely disappointed" by the CWU's action. "Just today, we agreed with the CWU that we would resume talks, which have been ongoing throughout the summer, on Wednesday," added Kevin Gilliland, the Post Office's network and sales director.
A union representing Post Office workers has defended a decision to strike in the week before Christmas.
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Cybercriminals used the flaw to install the Poison Ivy trojan on users' computers. This piece of malware can steal data or take remote control of a PC. Microsoft said in a blog the Fix It tool was "an easy, one-click solution that will help protect your computer right away" but "not intended to be a replacement for any security update". Microsoft said there had been an "extremely limited number of attacks". Before releasing the fix, the company had suggested workarounds such as disabling Active X controls and Active Scripting or downloading its Enhanced Mitigation Experience Toolkit. Another suggestion had been to change the security-zone settings on the browser to "high" and run IE in a restricted mode. So-called zero-day, or newly discovered, vulnerabilities are rare. According to security company Symantec, only eight such bugs were spotted in 2011. Symantec research manager Liam O Murchu said their novelty made them dangerous. "Any time you see a zero-day like this, it is concerning," he said. "There are no patches available. It is very difficult for people to protect themselves." The flaw, present in all versions of Internet Explorer except IE 10, was spotted by Luxembourg-based security expert Eric Romang, when his PC was infected by Poison Ivy last week.
Microsoft has released a temporary software fix for a bug in its Internet Explorer web browser.
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Marco Mama's powerful run and try put Warriors 7-0 up at half-time. Twice the Group 3 leaders fought back to level after the break, Fabien Sanconnie the first to go over. Val Rapava Ruskin then went over for Worcester, only for Fabian Guillaume's try and a last-gasp Gaetan Germain penalty to seal Brive's comeback win. Worcester, who are just one point above the relegation places in England's top flight, needed to win both their remaining two group games to have any chances of reaching the quarter-finals of Europe's second-tier competition. Defeat leaves them bottom of their group, with Brive four points clear at the top and on the cusp of a spot in the last eight of the competition. Worcester boss Carl Hogg had involved himself more heavily in the build-up to the match at Stade Amedee-Domenech, having previously allowed his backroom staff to take charge of a generally under-strength, second-string line-up. Mama was one of a number of experienced players included for the trip to France to try salvage hopes, but the Top 14 side still managed to condemn Worcester to a fourth defeat in Europe this season. Brive: Lapeyre; Ngwenya, Galala, Cabannes, Masilevu; Ugalde, Lobzhanidze; Lavergne, Acquier, Bekoshvili, Snyman, Mela (capt), Luafutu, Waqaniburotu, Sanconnie. Replacements: Ribes, Buys, Jourdain, Uys, Hireche, Pejoine, Tuatara, Germain. Worcester: Howard; Humphreys, Stelling, Braid, Hammond; Mills, Baldwin; Bower (capt), Taufete'e, Alo, Kitchener, Spencer, Taylor, Mama, Cox. Replacements: Singleton, Rapava Ruskin, Daniels, Barry, Betty, De Cothi, Arr, Eden. For the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter. Eight fire appliances attended the refinery and police officers were sent to the site shortly after 12:00. Refinery owners Ineos said there were no casualties as a result of the incident. Ineos said a leak was detected on a pipe carrying ethylene gas in its Kinneil Gas manufacturing plant which was being isolated. The company said in a statement: "Staff were evacuated from the immediate area and our well-practiced emergency procedures were implemented with the incident management team being mobilised. "Measures were put in place to contain the leak in the immediate vicinity of the affected plant and as an ongoing precaution road closures remain in place. "All of the people working in the area have been accounted for and there were no injuries. "Other areas within the Grangemouth complex, including the adjacent refinery were unaffected by the incident. "A full investigation into the cause of the incident is under way. "The regulators have been kept fully informed throughout." Pupils at primary and secondary schools in Grangemouth were kept indoors over lunchtime as a precaution at the request of the police, a Falkirk Council spokesman said. A spokesman for Scottish Fire and Rescue Service said: "At 12.12 on Tuesday, 2 May the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service was alerted to reports of a gas leak at the Grangemouth petrochemical site." Police Scotland said it attended the incident at about 12:15 and that it had closed a number of access roads.
Worcester's hopes of European Challenge Cup progress were ended after the Premiership strugglers suffered a dramatic late defeat by Brive. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A full investigation has been launched into the cause of a gas leak at the Grangemouth petrochemical site.
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Media playback is not supported on this device The 11-times UGP winner from England suffered broken bones and underwent surgery on Friday - his injuries are not believed to be life threatening. Martin lost control of his Tyco BMW at Ireland's corner on the circuit. He was leading the Superbike race by less than a second from Bruce Anstey when he crashed on the final lap. "Guy is currently being treated for his injuries in a Belfast hospital, but we expect him to be released within the next few days," said the Tyco team on Friday. The Lincolnshire rider was also fastest in Superbike practice for the Ulster GP. Martin clocked 132.23mph in the closing minutes of qualifying at Dundrod earlier on Thursday. Anstey, who went on to win the Dundrod 150, will be elevated to pole position in Martin's absence after lapping in 132.059. Isle of Man TT hat-trick hero Ian Hutchinson will start from second on the grid with Peter Hickman third. Stephen Watson presents coverage of the Dundrod 150 road races exclusively on the BBC iPlayer on Friday evening. It will include extended highlights of Thursday night's action and there's a preview of Saturday's Ulster Grand Prix.
Guy Martin is out of Saturday's Ulster Grand Prix as he recovers from injuries sustained in a crash during the Dundrod 150 race on Thursday.
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Portsmouth Safeguarding Children Board has studied how the authorities reacted to the case of Ashya King. The report also said the hospital should have acted sooner to get a second opinion about different treatment plans for the five year old. His story received global attention in 2014 when his parents took him abroad. Brett and Naghemeh King, of Southsea, were later arrested and held in a prison in Madrid. They had wanted him to undergo proton beam therapy in Prague, which had not been recommended by his care team in Southampton. The couple were later released and the therapy took place. In March, the King family said Ashya was cancer free. The report recommends that the government review the options available to professionals when children they are concerned about are taken abroad. It said the medical professionals involved "worked hard to ensure the best outcomes for the child and his family". But it added: "Unfortunately, the parents felt that their wishes and feelings about his treatment were not being given sufficient priority and they chose to disengage from the medical professionals and remove him from the hospital placing him at risk of serious harm if anything untoward had happened with regard to the nasogastric tube [through which he was fed]. "Professionals in the hospital attempted to accommodate the parents' wishes but did not respond speedily to their request for a second opinion. "Additionally the parents were not happy... that the National Clinical Expert Group would not fund Proton Beam Therapy as it did not meet the criteria for financial support ." It described the "limited options" available to agencies after the family fled the UK as "partly a result of the parents concealing the actions they had taken to ensure his safety and were compounded by them failing to respond to attempts to contact them". It concluded the management of the situation across these different agencies "could have been stronger". "This was particularly important because of the significant degree of media interest which... risked a loss of public confidence in child safeguarding in circumstances such as this."
A boy with a brain tumour taken from Southampton Hospital by his parents without telling staff was put at risk by their actions, a report has found.
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The explosion occurred outside a courthouse in the town, some just 7km (four miles) from the Turkish frontier. Azaz has recently been targeted by so-called Islamic State (IS). The latest blast is the worst since a nationwide ceasefire - brokered by Russia and Turkey. IS is not included in the truce, which has mainly held. No group has yet said it carried out the bombing, which according to some reports may have killed as many as 60 people and injured many more. The activist group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said six rebels were among the dead, with the rest believed to be civilians. Why Azaz is so important for Turkey IS has tried several times to take the town it originally held it in 2013. It is a major stronghold of the Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army. It has been contested by competing factions, with the Turkish government seeking to ensure that neither IS nor the Kurdish rebels it opposes manage to take control of it. Thousands of people displaced from elsewhere in the province have settled in Azaz. They include those from Aleppo, which the government took from the rebels opposed to President Bashar al-Assad late last year. Twenty-five people were killed in a car bomb attack on rebel headquarters in November. And 17 others died in a similar attack on a rebel checkpoint in October. IS has been blamed for the attacks. Russia, along with Turkey and Iran, is now pushing for peace talks to be held later this month in the capital of Kazakhstan, Astana.
At least 43 people have been killed in a car bomb blast in the rebel-held Syrian town of Azaz, near the Turkish border, reports say.
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Officers were looking for people they allege had vandalised election posters and fled to the property. A police spokesman said petrol bombs were also found, but Mr Mwamba's party has said they were planted. There have been growing concerns over political violence in Zambia ahead of next month's general election. The raid comes just two days after a ban on political campaigning in parts of the country had been lifted, reports the BBC's Meluse Kapatamoyo from the capital, Lusaka. Mr Mwamba, who was not in the house in Kasama in the country's Northern Province at the time, said his grandchildren were injured during the raid. "My small grandchildren have been taken to hospital as they have been victims of this barbaric act carried out by the police," he said in a post on his Facebook page. Mr Mwamba is the running mate of Hakainde Hichilema, the presidential candidate of the United Party for National Development (UPND) party. Northern Province Police Commissioner Bonnie Kapeso said the police officers had to use tear gas in order to get the people they were chasing out of the house. He added that five petrol bombs were found as well as spears and machetes. The UPND said in a statement that "the items allegedly found were only recovered once the house was cleared. We know these have been planted".Zambians go to the polls on 11 August to elect a president and a new parliament. Incumbent President Edgar Lungu, from the Patriotic Front, is facing a tough challenge from Mr Hichilema. Finn, 25, removed Brad Haddin, Glenn Maxwell and Mitchell Johnson to deny Australia a record total of 344 as they closed on 342-9. He finished with figures of 5-71, the second most expensive five-wicket haul in one-day international history. England then subsided to 231 all out. Finn's hat-trick, in England's tournament opener against co-hosts Australia, was the first by an Englishman and eighth in World Cup history. All of the paceman's wickets were taken with skied catches. "A fortuitous and unheralded hat-trick," said ex-England spinner Graeme Swann. "He seemed embarrassed by it." Gwent Police said it was searching for 37-year-old Paul Michael Price, from Liverpool, in October. The force said on Monday he had been arrested on suspicion of theft and was in custody. The trailer was stolen from Burton's Foods on Ty Coch Way, Cwmbran, Torfaen, on 17 June last year. Animal Defenders International (ADI) which helped move 33 lions last year, including José and Liso, says it might offer a reward for information. The lions' heads, skins, tails and feet were removed, prompting suspicions that they were killed for ritual purposes. The crime is currently being investigated by South Africa's police and anti-poaching units. ADI head Jan Creamer said she was heartbroken over the killings. "José and Liso had suffered a terrible life of abuse but their new life in Africa had given them a new lease of life," the group said in a statement. José had suffered brain damage from blows to the head in the circus, it said. The lions had been living at the Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary, inside a 5,000-hectare private farm in the northern Limpopo province. ADI says it has placed rescued animals in sanctuaries in South Africa for 21 years and this is the first such incident.
Zambian police have fired tear gas and made 28 arrests during a raid on the home of opposition vice-presidential candidate Geoffrey Bwalya Mwamba. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Steven Finn became the first England bowler to take a World Cup hat-trick with wickets off the final three balls of Australia's innings in a 111-run defeat in Melbourne. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man who was wanted in connection with the theft of a trailer containing £20,000 worth of biscuits has been arrested. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two lions rescued from circuses in South America and relocated to South Africa have been killed by poachers.
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He beat Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 4-6 6-2 6-3, 24 hours after being ruled ineligible to represent his adopted nation in the annual team tournament. "I'm still shocked, to be honest," said the Slovenia-born Bedene, 26. Britain's Heather Watson beat American Sloane Stephens to reach round three of the women's singles. Watson won the last 11 games to record a 6-3 6-0 win and will now play Belgium's Yanina Wickmayer. While Bedene said he respected the International Tennis Federation ruling, he said he was angry with the way it had treated him. "Even today, the first set, I was still thinking about it," said the British number two, who next plays Spanish 17th seed Roberto Bautista Agut. "I've been struggling. I was sad, almost crying. It's been difficult and I really wanted it. I'll still keep fighting." Bedene is considering taking his case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport but fears it could cost "six figures" and so prove impossible. "I think the best thing is the lawyers check it and see if there is a chance," said the world number 57, who said he would consult with the Lawn Tennis Association. "Not a slight chance, but a good chance to win. If not, I don't think it's fair on the LTA to do this."
Aljaz Bedene said he struggled to cope with the shock of failing in his bid to play Davis Cup tennis for Britain as he reached round two of the Miami Open.
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Officials say this will be the first time a sitting president has been questioned by prosecutors. Ms Park is accused of allowing her friend, Choi Soon-sil, to manipulate power from behind the scenes. Hundreds of thousands rallied on Saturday to demand her resignation. South Korean news agency Yonhap quoted officials as saying Ms Park's questioning should take place no later than Wednesday. Prosecutors have also questioned top bosses at Samsung, Hyundai and Korean Air. Lee Jae-Yong, vice chairman of Samsung Electronics, was questioned over whether Ms Park pressured the company into donating millions to foundations controlled by her friend Ms Choi. Ms Choi is accused of trying to extort huge sums of money from South Korean companies and is under arrest on charges of fraud and abuse of power. She is suspected of using her friendship with Ms Park to solicit business donations for a non-profit fund she controlled. The president, whose approval ratings have plummeted to 5% because of the scandal, has said she is "heartbroken". On Saturday, organisers said some one million people encircled the presidential compound in the South Korean capital of Seoul, in the largest anti-government rally the country has seen. It was the latest in weeks of demonstrations against Ms Park. On Sunday, the presidential office said Ms Park was "earnestly considering ways to normalise state affairs" and that she had "heard the voices of the people at the rally". She apologised earlier in November for putting "too much faith in a personal relationship". "Sad thoughts trouble my sleep at night. I realise that whatever I do, it will be difficult to mend the hearts of the people, and then I feel a sense of shame.'" She said wrongdoing would be punished, and that she was prepared to be investigated by prosecutors. South Korea's constitution does not allow a sitting president to be prosecuted, but investigations are permissible. Ms Park has 15 months left in her term. If she steps down elections must be held within 60 days. The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was sent samples after 35 Peshmerga fighters became ill near Irbil in August. On Monday, the sources said the samples tested positive for sulphur mustard. If confirmed, it would be the first known use of chemical weapons in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein. OPCW experts recently concluded that sulphur mustard was used in August in neighbouring Syria, during fighting between IS and rebel forces. Sulphur mustard - commonly known as "mustard gas" although it is liquid at ambient temperature - is a powerful irritant and blistering agent which causes severe damage to the skin, eyes and respiratory system and internal organs. The OPCW's report does not apportion blame for the attack in Iraq on 11 August, sources in The Hague told the Reuters and AFP news agencies. But when the Kurdistan Regional Government's ministry of Peshmerga affairs first reported the incident, it made it clear that it held IS militants responsible. The ministry said the affected Peshmerga fighters had been deployed along the frontline with IS, near the towns of Makhmour and Gwer when about 37 rounds exploded beside them, releasing a "white dust and black liquid". Tests on blood samples "revealed traces of mustard gas", it added. OPCW spokesman Malik Ellahi would only confirm on Monday that the watchdog had sent a team of experts to Iraq to assist the government's investigation. "The team completed its mission and the OPCW has shared the results of its technical work with the government of Iraq," a statement said, according to AFP. The OPCW's Executive Council is expected to discuss the findings next month. Experts are still uncertain about how IS might have obtained chemical weapons. One unnamed diplomat told the Reuters news agency that it was possible the sulphur mustard was obtained from the Syrian military's stockpile, which was supposedly destroyed after a deadly attack involving the nerve agent sarin outside Damascus in August 2013. However, CIA director John Brennan said on Sunday that IS militants were believed to have access to the necessary precursor chemicals and the capability to "manufacture small quantities of chlorine and mustard gas".
South Korean prosecutors are set to question President Park Geun-hye over allegations of political corruption in a scandal that has engulfed her presidency. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Sources at the global chemical watchdog say sulphur mustard was used last year in an attack on Kurdish forces in Iraq blamed on Islamic State (IS) militants.
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Christi and Bobby Shepherd died from carbon monoxide poisoning at a hotel in Corfu 2006. Mr King will investigate Thomas Cook's "customer health, safety, welfare, relations and crisis management practices". The company came under fierce criticism over its response to the deaths. A criminal trial held in Greece in 2010 cleared Thomas Cook of any responsibility and awarded the firm damages against the hotel's owner. But in May this year, an inquest jury ruled that the children had been unlawfully killed and said the tour operator had "breached its duty of care". Thomas Cook was criticised after it accepted compensation of £3m for lost earnings and legal expenses relating to the tragedy. It also told the media it had apologised to Christi and Bobby's parents before the parents had received the message from the company. It later apologised to the family and gave £1.5m to the children's charity Unicef. Thomas Cook also revealed last month that its former chief executive, Harriet Green, was awarded a bonus worth £5.7m, of which she would donate a third to charities chosen by the children's parents. Justin King spent 10 years as the head of Sainsbury before leaving the company last year. He will report his findings to Thomas Cook in September. Philippe Jegouzo, 33, was allegedly stabbed in the neck in an unprovoked attack, after he and his wife had stopped at a rest area at Conners Well on the Stuart Highway about 100km (60 miles) north of Alice Springs. The incident happened last Wednesday. The accused will appear at Alice Springs Local Court on Monday. Mr Jegouzo's wife tried to beat off the attacker by hitting him with a picnic table, according to local press reports. After the attack, she flagged down a passing car in which a nurse and her husband were travelling. The nurse tried in vain to save Mr Jegouzo's life, while her husband drove to the Aileron roadhouse, 40km (25 miles) further north, to raise the alarm. On Thursday, police detained a Melbourne man who had spent a night on the run in the bush. The suspect remains in hospital, suffering from heat exhaustion and dehydration. The Stuart Highway runs from Darwin to Port Augusta through the central Australian deserts for nearly 3,000km (1,875 miles) and is a popular route for outback travellers. Detective Superintendent Travis Wurst of the Northern Territory police described the attack as "bizarre" and "random" and said tourists should not be worried about driving through the area. "There are no safety concerns for any tourist or any traveller or any resident of Alice Springs or Central Australia whatsoever," said DS Wurst.
Former Sainsbury's boss Justin King is to lead an independent review into travel company Thomas Cook after two children died on one of its holidays. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Police in Australia have charged a 35-year-old man with murder after the death of a French tourist in the Northern Territory.
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The Spitfires beat Barrow 3-1 on Tuesday to extend their unbeaten league run to eight matches. Eastleigh have a game in hand on fifth-placed Tranmere, with four fixtures remaining in the regular season. "You can't control other results. We have to keep concentrating on ourselves," Todd told BBC Radio Solent. "You can only control your own games. It's hard not to look at the table, but you can't worry about it." Eastleigh host fellow promotion chasers Tranmere in their final home game on 23 April and have taken four points from an available six from their last two games at Grimsby and against Barrow. "We've got what we wanted from those games," said Todd. "The boys believe in themselves and they're really tight and working for each other."
Eastleigh manager Chris Todd has urged his players to focus on their own results after moving within a point of the National League play-off places.
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The entertainment giant said second quarter net income rose to $2.1bn with earnings per share up 6% to $1.30, below forecasts of $1.40 a share. Films like "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" and "Zootopia" helped drive up revenue but cable subscribers fell. Disney's shares fell 6% in after hours trading. The declining membership to Disney's sports channel -ESPN- has worried investors over the past year. Revenue from the company's cable television network fell 2% to $3.9bn as advertising income dropped. Disney, like other traditional media companies, has been hurt as more consumers move from television to streaming services. The studio division continued to generate strong profits. The animated movie "Zootopia" brought in $73.7m in its opening weekend. Revenue for the studio unit rose to $2.1bn from $1.68 last year. "Our studio's unprecedented winning streak at the box office underscores the incredible appeal of our branded content, which we continue to leverage across the entire company to drive significant value," said chief executive officer Bob Iger. Disney is struggling to layout a succession plan for Mr Iger. His expected replacement Tom Staggs, officially stepped down last week. Mr Iger has said he plans to leave in 2018.
Walt Disney has fallen short of Wall Street expectations for the first time in five years, despite several box office successes.
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A survey of more than 1,000 schools by the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) shows the number in deficit has doubled since 2015. And 71% of the heads polled were only able to balance their budgets by making cuts or dipping into reserves, said NAHT general secretary Russell Hobby. The government said it had protected the core schools budget in real terms. The NAHT's Breaking Point survey for 2016-17 shows: The greatest cost pressures on schools, according to heads, are: According to the union, almost 80% of schools are providing support for children with mental health issues from general school budgets, "stepping in where cuts in health and social care funding have failed to meet the growing demand for support". Mr Hobby said 98% of schools were losing funding "at a time when costs are rising and pupil numbers are growing". "The government must take urgent action and commit to funding schools sufficiently in the next Budget. It is time to stop viewing education spending as a cost and to start seeing it as an investment in England's future, and in our children's." Liam Collins head of Uplands Community College in Wadhurst, East Sussex, said budget pressures amounted to "a cut of 10 teachers, fewer clubs, no pastoral support, a narrowed curriculum, no counselling for students struggling with mental health issues, crumbling buildings, no IT upgrades, no new textbooks and no school planners. "Eventually this will impact on student outcomes." Labour said the NAHT's survey showed ministers "continue to hide their heads in the sand" on school funding. Shadow education secretary Angela Rayner said: "Headteachers should not be faced with a decision of whether to cut school staff or invest in new equipment. "The Tories have no plan to deal with falling budgets, chronic teacher shortages and not enough good school places - this is no way to run a schools system." A Department for Education spokesman said that school funding "will be over £40bn in 2016-17 - its highest level on record". The spokesman said the government's fairer funding proposals to end what ministers have termed "a postcode lottery" in school budgets would help. "These proposals will not only see more than half of England's schools receive a cash boost in 2018-19 but will also give head teachers certainty over their future budgets, helping them make long-term plans and secure further efficiencies," said the spokesman. "We recognise that schools are facing cost pressures, which is why we will continue to provide advice and support to help them use their funding in cost-effective ways, including improving the way they buy goods and services, so they get the best possible value for their pupils." Robertson, invited to the tournament after winning the Gdynia Open earlier this year, made a break of 114 on the way to opening up a 6-3 lead. Northern Irishman Allen struck a 112 in the final session, but Robertson took the 14th and 15th frames for the title. Ronnie O'Sullivan decided not to defend his title. The Englishman will also miss snooker's second most prestigious event, the UK Championship, which starts on on 24 November in York. "I played really well in the first session and the second was a little bit tighter," said Robertson, who took the £100,000 prize money. "I am very happy and it is the first major title I have picked up in over 12 months."
School budgets are close to breaking point in England suggests research by a head teachers' union. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Australia's Neil Robertson comfortably beat Mark Allen 10-5 to claim the Champion of Champions title in Coventry.
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Statistics obtained through a Press Association Freedom of Information request show that in 2013 none of the unmanned aircraft were detected in or around prisons in England and Wales. This rose to two incidents in 2014 and 33 in 2015. Items discovered include drugs, phones and USB drives. The government said incidents were rare. Across the 35 incidents, drugs were discovered at least six times, mobile phones more than eight times and a drone itself recovered in 19 instances. One of the biggest finds listed a drone, drugs, mobile phone, a charger and USB cards at HMP Oakwood in the West Midlands in December last year. Five incidents were recorded as including "unknown packages", which the Ministry of Justice said referred to an item recovered as part of a suspected drone incident, with no specific information recorded on the contents. A total of 14 incidents were recorded as "miscellaneous", which referred to a reported drone sighting in or around a prison. The MoJ said that where an incident had been listed as this or as "drone only", it did not know if the craft was being used for illegal purposes. Six incidents were listed as "drone only". The MoJ added that while a drone was not always found, there may have been evidence of a drone having been used, such as on CCTV, or there may have been witnesses. The location where the drones and packages were found varied from different places within prison grounds to just outside its walls. HMP Onley in Northamptonshire had four drone incidents between 2014 and 2015, followed by Lindholme, Ranby and Swansea prisons on three, and Bedford, Wandsworth and Manchester on two. Leicester, The Mount, Whatton, Leeds, Eastwood Park, Liverpool, Norwich, Glen Parva, Huntercombe, Wormwood Scrubs, Full Sutton, Guys Marsh, Long Lartin, Bullingdon, Wealstun and Oakwood prisons all recorded one incident. Mike Rolfe, national chairman elect of the Prison Officers Association (POA), said the use of drones to smuggle in banned items was of "serious concern". He called for more staff to tackle the issue, so they could carry out cell checks and prisoner searches to find parcels delivered by drone. The MoJ said it took a "zero tolerance" approach to illicit material in prisons. New legislation made it illegal to land a drone in prison or to use a drone to drop in psychoactive substances, it said. And anyone found using drones in an attempt to get contraband into prisons could be punished with a sentence of up to two years. A report published in December by HM Inspectorate of Prisons noted that illegal drugs, legal highs and illicit medications may get into prisons in a number of ways, meaning it is not always possible to quantify exactly how many drugs are making it into prisons. The report stated that "easy access to illicit mobile telephones makes it possible to plan the drops carefully".
Drones have increasingly been used to smuggle drugs, mobile phones and other contraband into jails, figures suggest.
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He is being described as Spain's Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian refugee whose lifeless body was photographed on the Turkish shore in 2015. The picture was seen by millions and prompted outrage at the plight of refugees. The decomposed body removed from a beach near Barbate by police last Friday is believed to be that of a six-year-old from DR Congo called Samuel. He died along with his mother when their flimsy inflatable boat sank during an attempt to cross the Strait of Gibraltar between Morocco and Spain. The number of migrants' bodies accounted for off the Spanish coast is officially in the hundreds. But the UN's refugee agency has calculated that more than 20,000 people have perished trying to cross to mainland Spain or on the Atlantic route to the Canary Islands since 1988. "We don't know how many Alans, how many Samuels or how many men and women lie at the bottom of the sea without their families knowing anything," said Rafael Lara of the Human Rights Association of Andalusia (APDHA) at Tuesday night's demonstration. Some 200 people reportedly attended, in Mr Lara's words, "to express revulsion at the deaths on our borders caused by the sectarian politics of our governments". The boat that Samuel and his mother Veronique were on left Tangier late at night on 11 January with 11 sub-Saharan migrants on board, according to Helena Maleno, a journalist and activist whose group is in touch with migrants in northern Morocco. The bodies of six adults - five men and one woman - found in mid-January off the southernmost tip of Spain are believed to be from that group. Spain's secretary of state for security, Jose Antonio Nieto, described Samuel's death as "dramatic but unavoidable" and he rejected suggestions that the government had tried to keep secret the discovery of the child's body to avoid an "Alan moment". As US President Donald Trump's stated aim of building an anti-migration wall the length of his country's border with Mexico comes under scrutiny, Spain faces criticism for what human rights campaigners describe as continual violations at the razor-wire fences it has constructed around Ceuta and Melilla, two cities on Africa's coast which belong to Spain but have land borders with Morocco. Last month a court reopened an investigation into the death of 15 African migrants, who drowned while trying to swim their way from Morocco into Ceuta on 6 February 2014. Although the Spanish authorities claimed that a Civil Guard border patrol team had tried to assist the migrants, the interior ministry eventually released CCTV footage from the border installations showing the officers firing rubber bullets and smoke canisters into the sea. "They were shooting at us," one survivor said on a recently screened documentary titled Tarajal, after the name of the nearby border post. "We were bunched together in a mass and most drowned." A court in Ceuta quickly shelved an investigation into the civil guards' actions, but in January an investigating judge in Cadiz decided that the case should be reopened to see if the 16 officers concerned made appropriate use of anti-riot gear. Videos of the incident also show how those migrants who managed to swim around a breakwater and reach the beach in Ceuta were instantly expelled back to the Moroccan side of the border fence, in contravention of international and national laws on refugees and the right to ask for asylum. Spain has been criticised by a number of organisations, including the Council of Europe, for what it calls "rejections at the border". Amnesty International said last month that more than 2,000 people had entered Ceuta and Melilla in mass assaults on the enclaves' five-metre-high (16ft) fences, but hundreds had been expelled directly to the Moroccan police on the other side without an opportunity to identify themselves. "Spain is violating international law and preventing people fleeing wars and persecution from accessing the international protection to which they have a right," said Amnesty International Spain's director, Esteban Beltran.
Spanish protesters gathered in the central square of Barbate, near Cape Trafalgar, to mourn the death at sea of a young boy from Africa.
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The song, with its Latin American vibe, will be used as the opening sequence for all of the BBC's World Cup programmes for Brazil 2014. It is the first time the musician, 64, has given his approval for one of his songs to be used in this way. Media playback is not supported on this device Wonder originally released the track on his multi Grammy Award-winning Songs In The Key Of Life album back in 1976. The song will feature for the first time on BBC One on 11 June (22:35 BST) to introduce the BBC's World Cup preview show. BBC Sport senior producer Ian Finch said the BBC were fortunate Wonder granted permission for it to be used. "It is very rare for an artist of this stature to approve the use of their music in this way, so we are thrilled and honoured," Finch said. "This song perfectly captures the feel-good, carnival atmosphere we will bring to our viewers during the World Cup this summer." The BBC will have comprehensive coverage of the World Cup, showing live matches on BBC One, BBC One HD and the BBC Sport website, with simultaneous games on BBC Three, BBC Three HD and the Red Button. BBC Two and BBC Two HD will host a morning catch-up highlights programme as well as full match replays of the game of the day.
Stevie Wonder's song Another Star will provide the theme tune for the BBC's Fifa World Cup coverage.
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The 25-year-old spent the first half of the campaign on loan at Grimsby, making 12 appearances without scoring. He was signed by Barnsley from FC Halifax a year ago, but has yet to start a game for the Oakwell side. Barrow have ended the contract of winger Andy Haworth, 28, by mutual consent and he has joined Macclesfield. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. Club captain Fonte, 31, joined Saints from Crystal Palace in January 2010 when the club were in League One. The Portugal international has made almost 250 appearances for them since and his new deal will take him through until the summer of 2018. "This is where I feel happy and where I've been very successful, so this is where I want to be," he said. "The contract was something that we had in our minds for a long time," Fonte added. "I'm delighted that we've signed it." Fonte has only missed one league game under Ronald Koeman since the Dutchman joined the club last summer. The manager praised the centre-back for his contribution to the team and the club. "It's a statement about respect for the player and for how important he is for the team," Koeman said. "His discipline and his performances are very good. You'd like to have captains like that and we have it." The figure puts annual growth in the 19-country bloc at 2.1% since a year ago. First-quarter growth was revised down slightly from 0.6% to 0.5%. Other figures released on Monday showed unemployment in the zone was at its lowest since 2009, building on the picture of improving economic health across the area. On Friday, figures showed Spain's economy, one of the worst-hit by the financial crisis, grew by 0.9% in the second quarter, suggesting the country's economy had finally grown back to the size it was before 2008. The International Monetary Fund last week said the outlook for several eurozone economies was brighter than initially thought, with countries including France, Germany, Italy and Spain seeing growth forecasts revised up. The European Central Bank is planning to tighten up monetary policy after years of pumping up activity through low interest rates and bond-buying. It intends to begin the process in the autumn, although inflation remains low at 1.3%, well under the 2% target for the eurozone. Low inflation is often one of the side effects of weak economic activity. The union's members, including police community support officers, are unhappy with a 1% pay rise offer, and are calling for a 3% wage increase. Up to 30,000 of Unison's members could be involved in the strike. The dispute also involves 999 call takers, scenes of crime officers and fingerprint experts. In December Unison suspended a planned strike to allow for further talks between the union and employers, but deadlock remains. The union said police staff have faced a pay freeze or below inflation pay rises for the past three years. Unison national officer Ben Priestley described industrial action as a "last resort", and said he was "hopeful" the dispute would be resolved and a strike avoided. "The rules around industrial action mean we have had to call another strike day to ensure we are still able to take strike action should the talks break down," he added. When Unison members were balloted for strike action last year 60% voted in favour.
Barrow have increased their striking options for the rest of the season by signing Shaun Tuton on loan from Championship club Barnsley. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Southampton defender Jose Fonte has signed a new three-year contract with the Premier League club. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The eurozone notched up growth of 0.6% in the second quarter of the year, official Eurostat figures showed. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Thousands of civilian police staff in England and Wales are set to strike on 23 January in a row over pay, Unison has said.
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The report makes it clear that it believes the world is on the cusp of a "new industrial" robot revolution. It looks at whether to give robots legal status as "electronic persons". Designers should make sure any robots have a kill switch, which would allow functions to be shut down if necessary, the report recommends. Meanwhile users should be able to use robots "without risk or fear of physical or psychological harm", it states. Lorna Brazell, a partner at law firm Osborne Clarke, was surprised by how far-reaching the rules were. But questioned the need to give future robots legal status. "Blue whales and gorillas don't have personhood but I would suggest that they have as many aspects of humanity as robots, so I don't see why we should jump into giving robots this status." The report suggests that robots, bots, androids and other manifestations of artificial intelligence are poised to "unleash a new industrial revolution, which is likely to leave no stratum of society untouched". The new age of robots has the potential for "virtually unbounded prosperity" but also raises questions about the future of work and whether member states need to introduce a basic income in the light of robots taking jobs. Robot/human relationships raise issues around privacy, human dignity (particularly in relation to care robots) and the physical safety of humans if systems fail or are hacked. The report acknowledges that there is a possibility that within the space of a few decades AI could surpass human intellectual capacity. This could, if not properly prepared for, "pose a challenge to humanity's capacity to control its own creation and, consequently, perhaps also to its capacity to be in charge of its own destiny and to ensure the survival of the species". It turns to science fiction, drawing on rules dreamed up by writer Isaac Asimov, for how robots should act if and when they become self-aware. The laws will be directed at the designers, producers and operators of robots as they cannot be converted into machine code. These rules state: Meanwhile robotic research should respect fundamental rights and be conducted in the interests of the wellbeing of humans, the report recommends. Designers may be required to register their robots as well as providing access to the source code to investigate accidents and damage caused by bots. Designers may also be required to obtain the go-ahead for new robotic designs from a research ethics committee. The report calls for the creation of a European agency for robotics and artificial intelligence that can provide technical, ethical and regulatory expertise. It also suggests that in the light of numerous reports on how many jobs could be taken by AI or robots, member countries consider introducing a universal basic income for citizens provided by the state. The report also considers the legal liabilities of robots and suggests that liability should be proportionate to the actual level of instructions given to the robot and its autonomy. "The greater a robot's learning capability or autonomy is, the lower other parties' responsibilities should be and the longer a robot's 'education' has lasted, the greater the responsibility of its 'teacher' should be," it says. Producers or owners may, in future, be required to take out insurance cover for the damage potentially caused by their robot. If MEPs vote in favour of the legislation, it will then go to individual governments for further debate and amendments before it becomes EU law. Natalie Hemming, 31, was last seen alive in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, on 1 May. She was found dead on 22 May. At Luton Crown Court, Paul Hemming, 43, of Milton Keynes, pleaded not guilty to murder but admitted her manslaughter. But, the prosecution did not accept the guilty manslaughter plea and Mr Hemming will now stand trial for murder. Mr Hemming also admitted a charge of obstructing a coroner in the execution of his duty by intending to prevent the Coroner of Buckinghamshire from holding an inquest. He then admitted a charge of preventing the lawful and decent burial of a dead body. Mr and Miss Hemming lived together at an address in Alderney Avenue, Newton Leys, Milton Keynes. She was last seen alive as she left her mother's home in Hemel Hempstead. Her body was found three weeks later, 30 miles away at Toms Hill in Chandlers Cross, Hertfordshire. Mr Hemming is now due to go on trial on Wednesday accused of her murder.
MEPs have called for the adoption of comprehensive rules for how humans will interact with artificial intelligence and robots. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has admitted concealing the body of his partner 30 miles from their home but has denied her murder.
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The Russian Premier League team earned their first victory in the competition's history on a night temperatures dropped below -4C. They also became the first Russian team to beat the Bundesliga giants in Champions League history. Bayern, five-time winners, will finish behind Atletico Madrid, and could face Leicester City in the last 16. With one round of matches remaining, 12 teams have already qualified, meaning four places are still up for grabs. Sevilla, Lyon, Porto, FC Copenhagen, Benfica, Napoli and Besiktas are vying for those places in the knockout stage. Bayern defender Jerome Boateng had a forgettable evening in Rostov. The former Manchester City centre-back was turned and left face down on the pitch as Sardar Azmoun opened the scoring, gave away the penalty Dmitry Poloz scored to make it 2-1, then went off injured before Christian Noboa scored the third. Bayern chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge had little sympathy for the Germany international. "Jerome needs to find a bit more quiet again," he said. "It's a bit too much for me since the summer. It would be in his interest and the whole club's if he came a little down back to earth." Besiktas pulled off their own 'Miracle of Istanbul' as they recovered from 3-0 down at half-time to draw 3-3 against Benfica in Group B. The home crowd created a spectacular atmosphere which inspired a remarkable comeback. Besiktas fans, who have previously broken the decibel record for the loudest crowd at a football match, took part in a silent celebration in support of the hearing and speech impaired, as well as a stand against racism. Fans were encouraged via social media to use sign language to show support for their team at kick-off. Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have swapped ownership of the Champions League goalscoring record since the former passed Raul's mark of 71 in 2014. Real Madrid forward Ronaldo ended last season on 93 goals - 10 clear of Barcelona captain Messi. But the Argentine's double in a 2-0 win over Celtic, added to his hat-tricks against both the Scottish side and Manchester City earlier in the competition, moved him to 92 - just three goals behind Ronaldo. Who will hit 100 first? Match ends, FC Rostov 3, FC Bayern München 2. Second Half ends, FC Rostov 3, FC Bayern München 2. Corner, FC Rostov. Conceded by Philipp Lahm. Corner, FC Bayern München. Conceded by Christian Noboa. Substitution, FC Rostov. Saeid Ezatolahi replaces Dmitriy Poloz. Corner, FC Bayern München. Conceded by Fyodor Kudryashov. Corner, FC Bayern München. Conceded by César Navas. Attempt blocked. Franck Ribéry (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Thomas Müller. Attempt saved. Thiago Alcántara (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Franck Ribéry. Substitution, FC Rostov. Denis Terentjev replaces Timofei Kalachev. Offside, FC Bayern München. Franck Ribéry tries a through ball, but Robert Lewandowski is caught offside. Attempt missed. Thomas Müller (FC Bayern München) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Rafinha. Franck Ribéry (FC Bayern München) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Timofei Kalachev (FC Rostov). Substitution, FC Rostov. Maksim Grigoriev replaces Sardar Azmoun. Attempt blocked. Thomas Müller (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Philipp Lahm. Attempt saved. Thomas Müller (FC Bayern München) header from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Juan Bernat with a cross. Attempt saved. Douglas Costa (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Juan Bernat. Substitution, FC Bayern München. Thomas Müller replaces Renato Sanches. Offside, FC Bayern München. Franck Ribéry tries a through ball, but Juan Bernat is caught offside. Attempt missed. Rafinha (FC Bayern München) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Franck Ribéry. Goal! FC Rostov 3, FC Bayern München 2. Christian Noboa (FC Rostov) from a free kick with a right footed shot to the bottom right corner. Foul by Thiago Alcántara (FC Bayern München). Dmitriy Poloz (FC Rostov) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Sardar Azmoun (FC Rostov) because of an injury. Attempt blocked. Sardar Azmoun (FC Rostov) right footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Miha Mevlja. Foul by Juan Bernat (FC Bayern München). Aleksandr Erokhin (FC Rostov) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Renato Sanches (FC Bayern München). Timofei Kalachev (FC Rostov) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, FC Bayern München. Mats Hummels replaces Jérôme Boateng because of an injury. Aleksandru Gatcan (FC Rostov) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Franck Ribéry (FC Bayern München) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Aleksandru Gatcan (FC Rostov). Foul by Douglas Costa (FC Bayern München). Vladimir Granat (FC Rostov) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Goal! FC Rostov 2, FC Bayern München 2. Juan Bernat (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the left side of the box to the top left corner. Assisted by Franck Ribéry with a through ball. Juan Bernat (FC Bayern München) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Sardar Azmoun (FC Rostov).
Bayern Munich will finish second in Champions League Group D after a surprise 3-2 defeat by FC Rostov.
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Defoe pounced on Lukasz Fabianski's mistake to score, but Swansea equalised with Gylfi Sigurdsson's penalty. Kyle Naughton was controversially sent off for a foul on Yann M'Vila but Andre Ayew put the Swans ahead by half-time. Patrick van Aanholt's deflected shot levelled and Defoe struck twice to secure a second successive league win. Relive Sunderland's victory at the Liberty Stadium. Sunderland have now leapfrogged arch rivals Newcastle into 18th in the Premier League table, just one point and one place below Swansea. Despite Defoe's heroics, it was referee Graham Scott who found himself as the centre of attention, with doubts hanging over three of the six goals as well as the seemingly harsh dismissal of Naughton. Joining the select group of Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsene Wenger, Harry Redknapp and David Moyes, Sunderland's Sam Allardyce became only the fifth manager to reach 450 Premier League games. Media playback is not supported on this device The former Bolton and Newcastle boss did not have to wait long to celebrate the landmark, as Defoe put Sunderland ahead after just three minutes. Fabianski inexplicably hit his goal-kick straight to Adam Johnson and was then only able to parry Fabio Borini's shot, allowing Defoe to tap in from what appeared to be an offside position. Allardyce's elation soon turned to anger, however, as Swansea equalised in similarly dubious fashion. Referee Scott awarded the hosts a penalty for what seemed like a Wes Brown trip on Ayew, but replays appeared to show the Ghanaian forward had fallen over his own feet. Sigurdsson confidently converted the spot-kick, much to Allardyce's visible fury on the touchline. If Defoe's opener and Sigurdsson's equaliser were debatable, Naughton's dismissal was a controversial flashpoint which prompted a vitriolic backlash from the home crowd. The Swansea right-back won the ball from M'Vila but, having done so with studs showing, Scott showed him a red card. Swansea interim manager Alan Curtis - who waited to confront the official at the interval - claimed Scott got "all the major incidents wrong", adding Naughton "clearly won the ball". Despite the setback, his side initially responded well to their numerical disadvantage as Ayew latched on to Fabianski's clearance and scored with a powerful drive. The Swans were not ahead for long though, as four minutes after the restart Van Aanholt's 20-yard shot deflected off Federico Fernandez and flew into the top corner. While Allardyce was presiding over his Premier League milestone, this was Curtis' first since being named Swansea's manager for the rest of the season. Media playback is not supported on this device Curtis' side defended raggedly throughout and there was a certain inevitability - and, once more, controversy - to Sunderland's third goal. Defoe was offside as he collected Johnson's through ball but linesman Mark Perry did not raise his flag and the Sunderland striker finished calmly. The England international striker was then perfectly placed to slide in from Van Aanholt's excellent cross to put the game beyond doubt with his fifth goal in two games. Swansea, who are 17th in the Premier League table, remain just one point above Sunderland and Newcastle immediately below them. Swansea manager Alan Curtis: "The first goal and third are clearly offside decisions. You can recover but when you play with 10 men for an hour, that's the one that killed us more than anything." Sunderland manager Sam Allardyce: "We manipulated or played with the situation as it panned out. That's all we can do. We have taken the opportunity rightly or wrongly to win the game. For us it's an unbelievable win. Today it's an enormous, enormous, enormous three points to give us encouragement and hope going forward." Sunderland will look to make it three Premier League wins from three when they travel to Tottenham on Saturday at lunchtime, while Swansea host Watford at the Liberty Stadium on Monday night. Match ends, Swansea City 2, Sunderland 4. Second Half ends, Swansea City 2, Sunderland 4. Offside, Swansea City. Lukasz Fabianski tries a through ball, but Bafétimbi Gomis is caught offside. Attempt saved. Bafétimbi Gomis (Swansea City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Jack Cork. Substitution, Swansea City. Jack Cork replaces André Ayew. Foul by Angel Rangel (Swansea City). Danny Graham (Sunderland) wins a free kick on the left wing. Substitution, Sunderland. Duncan Watmore replaces Jeremain Lens. Goal! Swansea City 2, Sunderland 4. Jermain Defoe (Sunderland) right footed shot from very close range to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Patrick van Aanholt. Foul by Angel Rangel (Swansea City). Jermain Defoe (Sunderland) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Swansea City. Conceded by Patrick van Aanholt. Substitution, Sunderland. Danny Graham replaces Fabio Borini. Offside, Sunderland. Jeremain Lens tries a through ball, but Adam Johnson is caught offside. Corner, Swansea City. Conceded by Patrick van Aanholt. Patrick van Aanholt (Sunderland) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Modou Barrow (Swansea City) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Patrick van Aanholt (Sunderland). Substitution, Swansea City. Bafétimbi Gomis replaces Wayne Routledge. Federico Fernández (Swansea City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Jeremain Lens (Sunderland). Corner, Sunderland. Conceded by Angel Rangel. Attempt missed. Neil Taylor (Swansea City) left footed shot from the left side of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Gylfi Sigurdsson. Substitution, Sunderland. Jack Rodwell replaces Lee Cattermole. Ki Sung-yueng (Swansea City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Lee Cattermole (Sunderland). Corner, Swansea City. Conceded by Adam Johnson. Offside, Sunderland. Fabio Borini tries a through ball, but Jermain Defoe is caught offside. Foul by Ashley Williams (Swansea City). Jeremain Lens (Sunderland) wins a free kick on the right wing. Vito Mannone (Sunderland) is shown the yellow card. Modou Barrow (Swansea City) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Patrick van Aanholt (Sunderland). Neil Taylor (Swansea City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Billy Jones (Sunderland). Offside, Swansea City. Gylfi Sigurdsson tries a through ball, but Angel Rangel is caught offside. Attempt saved. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Angel Rangel. Goal! Swansea City 2, Sunderland 3. Jermain Defoe (Sunderland) right footed shot from the right side of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Adam Johnson with a through ball. Corner, Sunderland. Conceded by Modou Barrow. Corner, Sunderland. Conceded by Angel Rangel.
Jermain Defoe struck a hat-trick as Sunderland dragged 10-man Swansea closer to the bottom three in a game packed with refereeing controversy.
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The constables, aged 47 and 35, were quizzed over conspiracy to commit misconduct in a public office, and conspiracy to steal and supply drugs. The officers, based at Perry Barr, Birmingham, were arrested in early morning raids. Five other men and one woman were also arrested in the raids by West Midlands Police's counter corruption unit. "All are being questioned at police stations across the West Midlands," a force spokesman said. More on this and other Birmingham news The other people arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit misconduct in a public office, conspiracy to steal and to supply drugs were a 42-year-old man and a woman, 36, both from Derby, and a man aged 28 from Alum Rock. A 42-year-old-man from Washwood Heath, a man aged 27 from Alum Rock and another man, 25, from Aston are being questioned on conspiracy to commit misconduct in a public office.
Two policemen have been arrested on suspicion of supplying drugs and corruption offences.
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The 47-year-old and his nine-year-old daughter were hit by a Kia Picanto in Woodhouse Lane, Benchill, Wythenshawe, at about 16:45 GMT on Tuesday. A woman, 27, and her two-year-old son, who was in a pushchair, were also hurt in the accident, police said. The 88-year-old driver remained at the scene. No arrests have been made. Police said the critically-injured man's daughter sustained some minor cuts and bruises. The woman was treated for a broken wrist and her son was uninjured. Police have appealed for anyone who witnessed the incident or who may have dash-cam footage to contact them.
A man is in hospital with "life-threatening injuries" after he was struck by a car which hit four pedestrians in Greater Manchester.
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Police spent hours checking documents at the 1MDB fund's Kuala Lumpur office. Mr Najib denies allegations that nearly $700m were transferred to his personal bank accounts from the fund. On Tuesday officials froze six accounts as part of the inquiry. The account holders were not identified. But the country's attorney general has since clarified that none of the accounts frozen were ones allegedly held by Mr Najib. The 1MDB fund said it was co-operating with the police investigation. "We can confirm that a number of officials from the task force, conducting an inquiry into 1MDB, visited our offices today," it said in a statement. "They were provided with a number of documents and materials to aid with the investigations currently taking place." The fund, set up by Mr Najib in 2009 and still chaired by him, denies giving any money to the prime minister. Meanwhile, in a BBC interview, Malaysia's former leader Mahathir Mohamed called on Mr Najib to show public proof that his assets are legal. Correspondents say he is facing the biggest crisis of his political career - pressure has been mounting since the Wall Street Journal published a detailed report last week. He was already under fire over his leadership, particularly from Mr Mahathir. Mr Najib has previously issued a statement on Facebook, saying that the various allegations made against him are "unsubstantiated" and "outrageous". He accuses Mr Mahathir of trying to topple him and describes his former mentor's claim that 42bn ringgits ($11bn) have gone missing from the fund as "reckless". "These are audited debts backed by 51bn ringgits [in] audited assets." Mr Najib said in his Facebook post.
The authorities in Malaysia have raided the office of a state investment fund as part of investigations into claims of corruption involving Prime Minister Najib Razak.
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Gunmen believed to be from the Boko Haram group opened fire on the pupils, who were in school uniform, at a school on the outskirts of Maiduguri. Boko Haram said the attack was to punish youngsters for helping the army. Some survivors said it was a response to the emergence of vigilante groups in the town. North-eastern Nigeria is under a state of emergency as the government tries to defeat an Islamist insurgency. Witness Ibrahim Mohammed said he was taking exams in a classroom at Ansarudeen School when gunmen stormed the building. "I saw five students sitting the exams killed on the spot," he said. "Four others were killed as they were entering the school premises." Hospital workers confirmed that the bodies of nine children, still in their uniforms, had been taken to the mortuary in Maiduguri. A spokesman for Boko Haram handed a message to local journalists saying that the attack was to punish youngsters for assisting the army. The BBC's Will Ross in Lagos says vigilante groups have been springing up in Maiduguri with young men wielding metal pipes, clubs and machetes handing suspected militants over to the army. A military spokesman said all those handed over would be given a fair hearing. However, with hundreds of people being held in detention and few ever coming to court, there is a danger that the vigilante groups could be used to settle scores, our correspondent says. On Sunday, a school in Damaturu was attacked by suspected Boko Haram gunmen and 13 people including students and teachers were killed. Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan imposed a state of emergency on north-east Nigeria last month and thousands more troops were sent to fight the Islamist militants. So far there is no evidence to suggest that large numbers of Boko Haram fighters have been killed, our correspondent adds. Passengers were forced out an emergency exit window of the 68-seat plane after it landed safely in Albury on Tuesday. A male passenger, 30, was arrested and charged over a "document threatening death or grievous bodily harm". Police did not disclose the alleged details of the note, found in a toilet, but said it was not terror-related. A Virgin Australia spokesman said flight VA1174 arrived safely at Albury airport and was met by police. Authorities said they were called about 15 minutes before the turboprop landed. The man was arrested at the airport. One passenger, Wendy Willett, said passengers did not know about the incident until police arrived on the tarmac. "There was nothing unusual about [the man arrested]," she told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "He read a book most of the flight." The man was granted bail and will face court on 4 July. Police were called to NatWest, Bristol Road South, Northfield on Friday. David Hempseed, 60, of Northfield, is also charged with possession of an imitation firearm and knife and arson with intent to endanger life. He was remanded in custody by magistrates to appear at Birmingham Crown Court on 24 March.
Suspected Islamist militants in north-east Nigeria have killed at least nine school children, the second targeted attack on students in recent days. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Virgin Australia plane has been evacuated after a threatening note was found on a domestic flight from Sydney to Albury, police have said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been charged with false imprisonment after a staff member was held hostage at a Birmingham bank, West Midlands Police said.
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Ken Robinson has told his constituency association in East Antrim that he would not be putting his name forward for next years assembly elections. On 20 September UUP MLA Robert Coulter announced his retirement from the Assembly. Mr Coulter is currently the second oldest member of the Assembly after Ian Paisley.
Another Ulster Unionist MLA is leaving the Northern Ireland Assembly.
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The club's fans reacted angrily to their side's failure to reach the semi-finals of the African Champions League. The former Spurs and Ajax coach argued with fans last Friday as his team drew 2-2 with Zambia's Zesco United to end their chances of progressing. Since then he has also received threats on social media prompting his decision to leave. Supporters also tried to attack the team during training on Tuesday. Al Ahly said in statement: "Jol has told us he will not be able to complete his contract (which another season and a half to run) for personal reasons. "We have accepted that and ended the contract with him." The 60-year-old, who has also managed Fulham in England and Hamburg in Germany, had helped the Egyptian team retain their domestic title in June. The club said Jol apologised for going out of the Champions League, a competition they have won a record eight times. The victim, from Buckinghamshire, was being tended to by pub and ambulance staff in Bournemouth when her black cockapoo, called Sophie, was taken. Police have issued an image of a woman they want to speak to over the theft at the Moon in the Square pub in Exeter Road late on Sunday 27 November. Anyone with information is urged to contact police. The theft happened while the victim, in her 50s, was being treated following a "medical incident" at the pub at about 23:30 GMT. PC Steve Lea of Dorset Police said: "The theft has obviously left the victim distraught. "I am appealing to anyone who knows the woman pictured to come forward as she may hold vital information that can assist with the investigation. "If you know the whereabouts of the dog or have any information about the incident, please contact police."
Dutch coach Martin Jol has quit Egypt's Al Ahly after just six months at the club over fears for his safety. [NEXT_CONCEPT] CCTV images have been released after a woman's bag and dog were stolen while she was being treated by paramedics.
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The researchers extracted DNA fragments of the ancient bacterium from the teeth of medieval corpses found in London. They say the pathogen is the ancestor of all modern plagues. The research, published in the journal Nature, suggests the 14th Century outbreak was also the first plague pandemic in history. Humans have rarely encountered an enemy as devastating as the bacterium, Yersinia pestis. Between 1347 and 1351 it sparked the Black Death, an infection carried by fleas that spread rapidly across Europe killing around 50 million people. Now scientists have uncovered some of the genetic secrets of the plague, thanks to DNA fragments drilled from the teeth of victims buried in a graveyard in London's East Smithfield. Professor Johannes Krause from the University of Tubingen, Germany, was a member of the research team. He said all current strains circulating in the world are directly related to the medieval bacterium. "It turns out that this ancient Yersinia pestis strain is very close to the common ancestor of all modern strains that can infect humans," he said. "It's the grandmother of all plague that's around today." Previously researchers had assumed the Black Death was another in a long line of plague outbreaks dating back to ancient Greece and Rome. The Justinian Plague that broke out in the 6th Century was estimated to have killed 100 million people. But the new research indicates that plagues like the Justinian weren't caused by the same agent as the medieval epidemic. "It suggests they were either caused by a Yersinia pestis strain that is completely extinct and it didn't leave any descendants which are still around today or it was caused by a different pathogen that we have no information about yet," said Professor Krause. Globally the infection still kills 2,000 people a year. But it presents much less of a threat now than in the 14th Century. According to another member of the research team, Dr Hendrik Poinar, a combination of factors enhanced the virulence of the medieval outbreak. "We are looking at many different factors that affected this pandemic, the virulence of the pathogen, co-circulating pathogens, and the climate which we know was beginning to dip - it got very cold very wet very quickly - this constellation resulted in the ultimate Black Death." Rebuilding the genetic code of the bacterium from DNA fragments was not easy, say the scientists. They removed teeth from skeletons found in an ancient graveyard in London located under what is now the Royal Mint. Dr Kirsten Bos from McMaster University explained how the process worked. "If you actually crack open an ancient tooth you see this dark black powdery material and that's very likely to be dried up blood and other biological tissues. "So what I did was I opened the tooth and opened the pulp chamber and with a drill bit made one pass through and I took out only about 30 milligrams of material, a very very small amount and that's the material I used to do the DNA work." From the dental pulp the researchers were able to purify and enrich the pathogen's DNA, and exclude material from human and fungal sources. The researchers believe the techniques they have developed in this work can be used to study the genomes of many other ancient pathogens.
The genetic code of the germ that caused the Black Death has been reconstructed by scientists for the first time.
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Mr Greenwald was one of the reporters who broke the 2013 story on internet surveillance by the UK and US. He told broadcaster ABC that Australia was "probably the country that has got away with things the most" following those revelations. But he said "we intend to change" that, implying there could be further leaks. Mr Greenwald was speaking on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Lateline programme on Thursday night via videolink from Rio de Janeiro. He said Australia was "one of the most aggressive countries that engage in mass surveillance as a member of the Five Eyes Partnership", a reference to the intelligence network established by Australia, US, UK, New Zealand and Canada. "There are interesting documents about what Australia is doing to privacy rights - not just to their own citizens," he said, adding that he plans to release his reports "as soon as we can". His comments came a month after whistleblower Edward Snowden criticised Australia's recently passed data retention laws at an Australian conference, where he spoke via videolink from Russia. In March, Australia passed new laws compelling telecommunications companies to store customers' phone and computer metadata for up to two years. The government said this was aimed at combating terrorism. Mr Snowden said he was planning to reveal more from documents taken from the US National Security Agency, including information on Australia's intelligence operations. He said Australia's role in mass surveillance was similar to that of the UK. "They'll collect everyone's communications, it's called pre-criminal investigation, which means they are watching everyone all the time," he said, adding that such information is also shared with other governments like the US and UK. Mr Snowden, a former NSA contractor, exposed the extensive internet and phone surveillance being conducted by the US and the UK in 2013. He passed NSA documents to Mr Greenwald and journalist Ewen Macaskill, who first broke the story in The Guardian. Bradley Lowery, who has neuroblastoma, took part in the warm-up against Chelsea on 14 December, scoring a goal. A campaign saw fans call for the strike to be given the accolade. The youngster, of Blackhall, County Durham, was named joint-winner alongside Manchester United's Henrikh Mkhitaryan. Bradley's mum, Gemma, tweeted: "Brad just woke up and watched #MOTD2 and found out he got #goalofthemonth - he is over the moon." Eight goals were selected for a public vote with Mkhitaryan's effort - also against Sunderland, on 26 December - notching up 39.9%. While not included in that selection, Bradley's goal was named joint-winner of the prize for December. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2013 and last year more than £700,000 was raised to pay for treatment in the USA, including a donation of £200,000 from Everton. However, his family were later told his cancer had grown and treatment would only give him more time. After his story made headlines, he was sent more than 250,000 Christmas cards by well-wishers from across the globe.
Australia conducts one of the world's most aggressive mass surveillance programmes, US journalist Glenn Greenwald has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A seriously ill five-year-old boy who took to the pitch for his beloved Sunderland has won Match of the Day's Goal of the Month award.
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Bobby Grant put Fleetwood in front after 34 minutes, taking a pass from David Ball and cutting in from the right before beating keeper Colin Doyle with an angled shot high into the net. The goal came after former Bradford striker Devante Cole had missed a great chance of scoring against his old club in the 14th minute. Cole looked certain to score after intercepting a loose pass from Josh Cullen, but Doyle dived full length to turn his low shot away for a corner. Bradford equalised in the second minute of stoppage time at the end of the first half, three minutes after visitors' keeper Chris Neal had made a fine save to stop Haris Vuckic's shot on the line. However, Neal could nothing to prevent Filipe Morais' equaliser. The Portguese winger raced on to a pass from substitute Billy Clarke and scored with a rasping shot from 10 yards to leave the sides level 1-1 at half-time. Bradford's winner came in the 62nd minute. Timothee Dieng was held by back in the penalty area by Amari'i Bell and Clarke scored from the spot. Report supplied by Press Association. Match ends, Bradford City 2, Fleetwood Town 1. Second Half ends, Bradford City 2, Fleetwood Town 1. Romain Vincelot (Bradford City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Cian Bolger (Fleetwood Town). Foul by Jordy Hiwula-Mayifuila (Bradford City). Conor McLaughlin (Fleetwood Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Josh Cullen (Bradford City). Bobby Grant (Fleetwood Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by James Meredith (Bradford City). Ashley Hunter (Fleetwood Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Bradford City. Conceded by Chris Neal. Attempt saved. Mark Marshall (Bradford City) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Josh Cullen (Bradford City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Bobby Grant (Fleetwood Town). Nathaniel Knight-Percival (Bradford City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Ashley Hunter (Fleetwood Town). Corner, Fleetwood Town. Conceded by Nathaniel Knight-Percival. Attempt blocked. David Ball (Fleetwood Town) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Corner, Fleetwood Town. Conceded by Nathaniel Knight-Percival. Attempt saved. Conor McLaughlin (Fleetwood Town) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Substitution, Fleetwood Town. Cian Bolger replaces Eggert Jónsson. Ashley Hunter (Fleetwood Town) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Josh Cullen (Bradford City). Corner, Bradford City. Conceded by Nathan Pond. Corner, Bradford City. Conceded by Amari'i Bell. Foul by Mark Marshall (Bradford City). Eggert Jónsson (Fleetwood Town) wins a free kick on the right wing. Attempt missed. Billy Clarke (Bradford City) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Attempt blocked. Alex Jakubiak (Fleetwood Town) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt missed. Ashley Hunter (Fleetwood Town) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. Attempt blocked. Bobby Grant (Fleetwood Town) right footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Corner, Fleetwood Town. Conceded by Stephen Darby. Attempt missed. Nathaniel Knight-Percival (Bradford City) header from the left side of the box misses to the left following a corner. Corner, Bradford City. Conceded by Amari'i Bell. Billy Clarke (Bradford City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by David Ball (Fleetwood Town). Substitution, Fleetwood Town. Ashley Hunter replaces Martyn Woolford. Substitution, Fleetwood Town. Alex Jakubiak replaces Devante Cole. Substitution, Bradford City. Nicky Law replaces Filipe Morais. Substitution, Bradford City. Mark Marshall replaces Haris Vuckic.
Third-placed Bradford City maintained their unbeaten start to the season - and ended a run of five successive draws - after coming behind to earn a win over Fleetwood Town at Valley Parade.
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Media playback is not supported on this device Wales host Italy on Saturday with home coach Warren Gatland saying the Azzurri deserve their place, but backing a one-up, one-down play-off in the long term. On current standings Italy would play Georgia for a place in 2017's event. "I think it is a stupid question because I think Italy do a lot for this tournament," said number eight Parisse. "Imagine teams like Ireland, Scotland or even France being last in the tournament and going to play other nations after being relegated," he said. "You think a federation like Ireland or France are going to accept that to take a risk? Or is it just because we are Italy?" Italy, badly affected by injuries, have lost all four of their games in the tournament so far this year. But Parisse, capped 118 times by his country, doubts whether the second-tier nations could perform as well as they have in recent years. "I think we need to remember what has happened in the past," he said. "We are really respectful of all the nations like Georgia and Romania and at their level they show a lot of progress but they haven't got the results we have. They haven't beaten France, they haven't beaten Ireland twice. "They haven't got the historic results we have so we deserve to be here, it's as simple as that." The tournament became the Six Nations in 2000 when Italy joined. They have beaten Wales, Scotland, France and Ireland, but never beaten England or finished better than fifth in the table. Wales finished bottom of the table in 2003. The 29-year-old, who has scored 92 goals in 356 career games, completed a season-long switch to the Championship club on Wednesday. Grabban joins James Vaughan, also 29, on Wearside, as well as teenage strikers Josh Maja and Joel Asoro. "He's experienced and knows the division," Grayson told BBC Newcastle. "He could have stayed at Bournemouth but swapped places from one end of the country to the other. That shows a real willingness and attitude to get back playing. "His experience will be vital because we're quite a young group at top of the pitch. He's got goals in him too and that's why we've signed him. Joining Grabban in confirming a move to Sunderland on Wednesday was Blackburn goalkeeper Jason Steele. Newton Aycliffe-born Steele began his career at Middlesbrough and has joined Sunderland from Rovers, for whom he made 105 appearances. Grayson had been seeking a replacement for the departed Jordan Pickford and Vito Mannone, who joined Everton and Reading respectively. "It's no secret we needed a goalkeeper," he added. "Jason has a wealth of experience in the Championship and he used to the routine of fixtures every Saturday-Tuesday." By the time the RSPCA arrived at their home in Boroughbridge near York, the 2ft (60cm) long snake had found sanctuary in a vacuum cleaner. Lucy Green from the animal welfare charity said: "It was quite a surprise." The snake was taken away by the RSPCA and is said to be in good health. It is believed to be somebody's pet due to its good condition. The charity said it would be rehomed in seven days if no owner comes forward. Ms Green said the wife saw the snake on Friday afternoon and initially thought her husband was playing a prank on her as it looked like a "realistic toy". She said: "When I arrived the snake was no longer in the airing cupboard but had slithered inside the vacuum cleaner. "It was quite a surprise to flip the head of the vacuum cleaner over and see the snake's little orange head poking out." Ms Green said she visited several neighbours of the house on The Chase but no-one claimed to have mislaid their snake. She said: "Perhaps he got out of his vivarium and decided to do some trick or treating for Halloween, or go and frighten some neighbours."
Italy captain Sergio Parisse has reacted angrily to the suggestion that promotion and relegation should be introduced in the Six Nations. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Striker Lewis Grabban has experience to pass onto the developing forwards at Sunderland following his loan move from Bournemouth, says boss Simon Grayson. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A couple got a surprise when they found a corn snake in their airing cupboard.
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Jeff Hassler, Rhys Webb, Dan Evans and Sam Underhill got the four tries on the board with nearly half an hour left, Dan Biggar converting three. Hallam Amos scored two fine tries for the home side and Carl Meyer's score gave the Dragons late hope. But the Ospreys deserved to hold on for the win. The Ospreys started brightly after their poor showing against the Scarlets, and Canadian wing Hassler, a late call-up, took advantage of an overlap to score after four minutes. But the Dragons hit back five minutes later when Carl Meyer and Tyler Morgan combined to send Amos racing over for a fifth try in four league games. They paid the price for giving away too many penalties when Wales star Webb scrambled over for Biggar to convert, while Rynard Landman was sin-binned after repeated infringements. Carl Meyer's long-distance penalty from just inside his own half kept the home side in it, but the visitors seized the advantage just before the break. Evans went over on the outside in the final move of the half, Biggar's conversion making it 19-8 at the break. Amos scored with a superb kick and chase, his fourth try in six days, to keep the Dragons in contention, but the Ospreys had the bonus point wrapped up after 51 minutes when man-of-the-match Underhill crashed over and Biggar converted. However, the Dragons set up another grandstand finish, Amos turning provider for Carl Meyer to burst through and convert his own try after 67 minutes. But the Ospreys defence held out and the result means the visitors retain their outside hopes of Champions Cup qualification. The Dragons suffered their seventh straight defeat going into their Challenge Cup quarter-final at Gloucester, with some home supporters booing when they saw shots of their coaching team on the big screen during the second half. Dragons: Carl Meyer, Adam Hughes, Tyler Morgan, Adam Warren, Hallam Amos, Dorian Jones, Sarel Pretorius; Phil Price, Elliot Dee, Brok Harris, Rynard Landman, Matthew Screech, Lewis Evans, Nic Cudd, Taulupe Faletau (capt). Replacements: Thomas Rhys Thomas, Boris Stankovich, Lloyd Fairbrother, Nick Crosswell, Ed Jackson, Charlie Davies, Geraint Rhys Jones, Nick Scott Ospreys: Dan Evans; Hanno Dirksen, Owen Watkin, Josh Matavesi, Jeff Hassler; Dan Biggar, Rhys Webb (Capt); Nicky Smith, Scott Baldwin, Dmitri Arhip, Adam Beard, Rynier Bernardo, Olly Cracknell, Sam Underhill, Joe Bearman Replacements: Scott Otten, Gareth Thomas, Aaron Jarvis, Dan Lydiate, Rory Thornton, Brendon Leonard, Sam Davies, Jonathan Spratt Referee: John Lacey (Ireland) Assistant referees: Craig Evans, Sean Brickell (both Wales) Citing commissioner: Jeff Mark (Wales) TMO: Paul Adams (Wales)
The Ospreys kept alive their slim hopes of a top-six finish in the Pro12 with a bonus-point victory over struggling Newport Gwent Dragons.
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Police, fire and ambulance crews all attended the incident which happened just after 14:00. The teenage hill-walker is believed to have suffered a back injury.
A rescue operation is under way on Arthur's Seat after a 19-year-old man fell from Salisbury Crags.
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The Rhinos lost 66-10 at Castleford last week prompting Hetherington to say he was "not stubborn enough to believe no change is always the best option". "Something needed to be said after such an ugly day. Gary cleared it with me," McDermott told BBC Radio Leeds. "I've got no drama with anything he said in it." He added: "There are some lines where you might think 'what does that mean?' I think what Gary is saying and what we are saying is that we are not going to just change after one bad day at the office. "For me the biggest thing about the Castleford game was they were white hot. We shouldn't be conceding 66 points but don't get away from the fact that they were brilliant on the day." McDermott led Leeds to the treble in 2015 but they struggled last season, failing to finish in the top eight in Super League. Hetherington said in the letter that he would be in a "better position to make an accurate judgement on the performance of all our players, coaching staff and senior management including myself" after their next four games. The Rhinos, who host Catalans on Friday, have lost two and won two of their opening four Super League fixtures. The former Zimbabwe captain, 43, took over from Peter Moores in January 2009 and has since overseen successive Ashes series victories over Australia. "I am delighted to have been given the opportunity to build on the considerable progress we have made to date as a squad," he said. He has accepted a fresh staff contract with the England and Wales Cricket Board, rather than a fixed-term deal. Flower had been India's first choice as their new coach before they appointed Duncan Fletcher in April. However, the approach soon faltered as the former Essex batsman was unwilling to consider uprooting his family. England begin a four-Test series against India in July, after Sri Lanka arrive in mid-May to play three Tests. "We have made no secret of our determination to become the number one side in the world and challenge for global titles and I feel we have been making steady progress," added Flower. Now that Flower's continuing services have been secured, the ECB's next task is to determine whether Andrew Strauss wants to stay on as one-day captain Read more from Alison's blog "I firmly believe we have the talent amongst the playing squad and management team to help us realise our ambitions." Despite an underwhelming campaign in the recent World Cup, Flower has built a formidable reputation during his spell with England. In addition to Test series victories over Australia, he guided England to their first major tournament win at the ICC World Twenty20 in May 2010. During his tenure England have risen from sixth place in the International Cricket Council's Test rankings to third behind India and South Africa. In contrast to the fractious relationship between then-captain Kevin Pietersen and his predecessor Moores, Flower has led a united dressing room. Since taking the job on a permanent basis in April 2009, after an initial period as interim coach, he has forged a close and successful partnership with Test and one-day international captain Andrew Strauss. Flower also won admiration for the manner in which he managed skin cancer - having a melanoma removed from his right cheek during the during the second day of the opening Ashes Test in November. "Andy's outstanding leadership, commitment, and his open and honest approach have been key factors in the success the England squad has enjoyed over the last two years," said England Cricket managing director Hugh Morris. Although there is no specific clause in Flower's new contract giving him more control over the team's future schedule, he will meet Morris and his support staff in the next few weeks to discuss players' workloads. Flower blamed injuries in the run-up to the recent World Cup on the length of the Ashes tour that preceded it, prompting fears he could walk away from his post. England played their first tour match against Western Australia on 5 November and completed the trip with their seventh one-day international on 6 February. Flower is keen to ensure England do not endure a similarly congested fixture schedule again, ensuring he has sufficient recovery time from intensive Test, one-day and Twenty20 series. "The volume of cricket played is tough for anybody," former England fast bowler Angus Fraser told BBC Radio 5 live. "Andrew Strauss has a huge workload, players are rested so why shouldn't coaches? "It is difficult for coaches to be fresh to maintain their enthusiasm over a period of time."
Leeds Rhinos coach Brian McDermott says he is "cool" with the open letter chief executive Gary Hetherington released to fans earlier this week. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Andy Flower has signed a new contract to remain as England team director.
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The 32-year-old defender left for Merseyside on loan with a view to a permanent move, after making 124 appearances for the Hatters. "I would have loved to have stayed but circumstances with the missus and two kids just weren't ideal at this time," he told BBC Three Counties Radio. "It was only right for me to start being a dad again after three years." He continued: "I'm down in Luton all week and the kids are up there. My oldest girl is six now and my other girl's one and she's growing up and a handful. "Selfishly, I would have loved to have stayed but I had to make the decision for my family and the kids more than anything." McNulty moved to Kenilworth Road from Fleetwood in January 2013, and helped the club end their five-year absence from the Football League in 2014. And McNulty, who was recently captain of the Hatters, says he has been touched by the support he has received from fans. "Looking back, I only signed on a short-term deal from Fleetwood," he said. "You don't expect things to go as well as they did. "Maybe it would have been right to move the family down when I first signed, but circumstances weren't right. "Things have gone really well, that's the sad thing about it - I really do believe the club are going to get promoted (this season). "Obviously I get a lot of negative press, and it took me a while to win some people over. I'd like to think that the majority of Luton fans think I served the club well and every time I pulled the shirt on I gave 100%. "I couldn't have asked much more from them and I'd like to think that they couldn't have asked much more from me."
Steve McNulty says it is time to "be a dad again" after leaving Luton for Tranmere to move closer to his family.
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Commonwealth Games 2014 silver medallist suffered serious neck and head injuries in Vietnam. Vietnamese doctors gave Inglis, from Daviot, near Inverness, a 1% chance of survival. In a new update to her supporters on her recovery, she joked that she may need help to choose perfumes. Inglis, who is determined to return to competitive judo, said that overall her surgeon was "really happy" with her continuing recovery. In the update, the 28-year-old said: "Unfortunately I've lost my sense of smell and, as it was the front lobe of my brain I injured, that won't ever heal and potentially could affect my taste buds. "Guess got to take it on the chin and we can agree I'm still very lucky and if that's now what I have to live without it's not so bad." She then joked she may need help with future perfume purchases. In another post, Inglis said the DVLA has given her the all clear to drive again following an assessment of her condition. Inglis was teaching in Vietnam when she was seriously injured in the accident on 10 May last year. She was riding a taxi motorbike when part of her skirt caught on the machine's back wheel and she was pulled to the ground. A crowdfunding campaign raised money to cover the cost of treatment in Thailand and a flight back to Scotland. She woke up from a coma in a hospital in Edinburgh, six weeks after the accident. A titanium cap was bolted to her skull as part of her treatment and recovery from her injuries.
Judo's Stephanie Inglis says the brain injury she suffered in a road accident over a year ago has caused her to lose her sense of smell permanently.
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Media playback is not supported on this device The pre-match atmosphere inside Estadio Beira-Rio suggested otherwise: a cold, wet, gloomy day in keeping with the low-key mood as kick-off neared in a tie Germany were expected to win. There was little singing, dancing, colour or culture - at least not to the levels witnessed prior to most other fixtures in a tournament where the on and off-field flair has reflected that of Brazil itself. But even without the carnival spirit, the football delivered. Open, fearless attacking play, the underdog pushing a favourite to its limit, deservedly earning respect and support, threatening an upset few could have argued about had it materialised. Germany go on to meet France in what should be a classic quarter-final between two of the game's traditional powerhouses. Algeria go home with their heads held high. "We're devastated but proud," captain Madjid Bougherra told BBC Sport. "We showed good football, a good image and played with heart and togetherness. We nearly did something beautiful. But this is football and we are part of the story." It is a story that appears to provide a new thrill, a fresh piece of drama, yet more tension every step it takes towards the conclusion. This was billed as a grudge match: Algeria seeking revenge for Germany's convenient 1-0 win against Austria in the 1982 World Cup, which sent those two into the knockout stage and the Desert Foxes out. But there was no sign of any spite as both team went in search of goals. There were 38 shots - 28 of those by Germany, a record in a match this World Cup. Yes, much of the finishing was below-par. But the goalkeepers were superb and, anyway, it added to the drama. Algeria repelled an early spell of pressure from the three-time champions before visibly growing in belief, creating a series of brilliant chances and heading in for half-time the better team. Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff said his side were "not surprised". "They played the tactics we expected but we didn't play well in the first half. "We didn't run a lot, we didn't adapt, everybody wanted the ball at their feet and Algeria were smart on counter-attacks." The introduction of forward Andre Schurrle at the break, and midfielder Sami Khedira later on, made a significant difference and Germany were able to establish an element of control. However, Algeria now had the backing of many neutrals as well as their own followers and they responded by showing near-faultless defensive resilience, while still getting forward when viable. "They didn't score after 90 minutes and during the break before extra time we were very confident, " said Bougherra. "We said, 'don't concede a goal and maybe we can take it to penalties'." Schurrle's strike early in the added period was greeted with scenes of relief, rather than wild celebration, among the Germany players, staff and supporters - quite a few of whom come from Porto Alegre following vast 19th century European immigration to the city. Mesut Ozil struck a second to ease the nerves, but Abdelmoumene Djabou volleyed in to rekindle Algerian hopes. A last-gasp chance had the entire squad off the bench, but Germany stood firm. As coach Vahid Halilhodzic and a number of his charges failed to control the flow of tears at full time, a chant of "Algeria! Algeria!" rang out around the stadium for a good 30 seconds. The loss meant African representation in Brazil is over. The last-16 has seen hosts Brazil scrape past Chile on penalties, Netherlands and France leave it late against Mexico and Nigeria, and now Germany have pulled off their own dramatic escape. "The thing I'm most worried about now is the physical state," said Bierhoff. "We have a lot of tiredness in our legs, so we have to see over the coming days how to recover, how to get fresh. "It will be a new game and France, for sure, at the moment could be a little bit the favourite." Against Algeria, Germany did not resemble a team who plan to lift the title in Rio on 13 July. Their defence looked sluggish, midfield unimaginative and attack profligate. There was a distinct lack of urgency and a further headache when right-back Shkodran Mustafi limped off to join Lukas Podolski on the sidelines. "There's a saying in the US: it's about survive and advance," said Bierhoff, the former Germany captain. "We survived. We knew it would be difficult, like it has been for all the other teams too. Nobody is easy any more. "I didn't expect teams to play so openly. Everybody plays to win. It's not very defensive. It's a very interesting World Cup." For the best of BBC Sport's in-depth content and analysis, go to our features and video page.
In a World Cup that rarely seems to deliver a bad game, we probably should have known that Germany's 2-1 extra-time victory over Algeria would be another belter.
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Danielle Marr, 18, was in a science class at Waid Academy in Anstruther, Fife, when her pager sounded in school for the first time. The teenager, who is in her final year, was called out to Anstruther lifeboat station at 10:40 on Wednesday, where she was joined by fellow volunteers. They set off to help a 28ft vessel that had suffered mechanical failure. Another new volunteer, mother-of-two Louise McNicoll, 30, was also involved in the rescue which happened off the coast of Crail. Danielle said: "I was assisting a junior pupil in a science class when my pager sounded. "It was a strange feeling as it's the first time I have heard the pager go off in school and the teachers and staff were great to allow me to exit so quickly. "The shout itself went exactly to plan as we regularly practise towing the all-weather lifeboat with our D class and vice versa, so it wasn't the first time that myself or Louise have worked on this task, but it certainly was a different feeling doing it in a shout scenario." The teenager has permission to leave class for rescues. She is following in the footsteps of her older brother Anthony, who has volunteered at the station since Danielle was six. The two women have volunteered at the lifeboat station for several months. During the rescue, the volunteers secured a towing line to the boat under the supervision of the coxswain and senior crew before the short journey back to Anstruther harbour. Ms McNicoll said: "I was getting my son ready for nursery when my pager sounded. "I had the added extra of dropping my son at my mum's house on the way to the station. "It was great to see the training we practise put into action and having my first shout alongside Danielle was an added bonus. "The senior crew assisted us in what we had to do and all in all it was a job well done."
A teenage RNLI volunteer had to leave school to help a broken-down boat on her first emergency callout.
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The responses were part of a consultation into Third Energy's application to frack at a site near the village of Kirby Misperton in Ryedale. North Yorkshire County Council said: "The scale of the concern is unknown at this point". The matter would be referred to the police if needed, it added. The council is in the "process of verifying the identification of people and organisations that have made representations" about the shale gas application at the KM8 well site. It had raised concerns "some 'en masse' representations from objectors have included emails and letters unbeknown to the owner of the email address or the named person on the letter and that personal data may have been used without consent". A council paper said the irregularities were discovered because each consultation response was acknowledged by the council. The consultation into plans to extract shale gas on land near Kirby Misperton ended on Wednesday. The council had received 2,465 letters or e-mails by 8 October. The next meeting of the planning and regulatory functions committee is on 20 October. The 21-year-old joined the Rams in July 2014, when his contract at Newcastle United expired. His only first-team appearance for the Rams so far came in January's FA Cup third-round win at Hartlepool. "We think Jonathan is one of the best young goalkeepers around," said Luton boss Nathan Jones. Mitchell is eligible to make his Luton debut against Leyton Orient on Saturday. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. Ezequiel Lavezzi was photographed pulling the corner of his eyes in pictures taken for the Chinese Super League side Hebei China Fortune. The club has since said they were meant to be "light-hearted" and "wacky". But instead they have caused huge offence in China, with people accusing him of racism. "This is an extremely abominable gesture that discriminates against Chinese people. Get him out of here!" one person wrote on social media platform Weibo. In a statement released on Sunday, Lavezzi said he had "no intention of insulting the Chinese people", and was simply making funny faces at the request of the photographer. "I'm very happy to be here as part of the Hebei club," he added. "I have had great time here with my team mates and it has been a great journey. Every Chinese person around me is friendly and I love my life here. "I deeply apologise if this photo has offended the Chinese public and fans. I will be more careful in the future." The club has also apologised. Lavezzi, 32, moved to the Chinese side last year from Paris St -Germain. The two-year deal was reported to be worth £23.5m ($30.3m). Stewart Hosie will tell his party's conference in Glasgow that the only way to make sure Westminster delivers will be to have SNP MPs at Westminster. Recent polling has suggested that the SNP is on course to winning the majority of Scotland's 59 seats. The UK's electorate will vote for their next MPs on 7 May. Mr Hosie, who succeeded Nicola Sturgeon as SNP deputy leader last November, will close his party's conference later. With less than six weeks to go to the general election, he will say that a vote for the SNP is needed to help bring about an end to austerity and deliver more powers for Holyrood. He will stress to delegates: "The only way to make sure Westminster delivers - on anything - will be to return the largest ever number of SNP MPs to Westminster." With both the Conservatives and Labour "signed up to another £30bn of cuts" he will say the UK is "on track for a decade of austerity - unless we achieve change by voting SNP for investment in jobs and growth". The MP will insist that while "austerity has failed" the nationalists offer a "real alternative" to the election. Mr Hosie will add: "We know the opinion polls are in our favour. But this is only potential. "Our job is now to work like never before. To turn this electoral potential into votes and seats. If we do that then this nation will prosper and flourish."
An investigation has been launched into how objections to plans to frack for shale gas in North Yorkshire were sent "unbeknown" to the persons named. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Luton Town have signed goalkeeper Jonathan Mitchell on loan from Championship side Derby County until the end of the season. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An Argentina international has apologised after he made a slant-eyed pose in promotional pictures for his Chinese football club. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The SNP will "work like never before" to turn the party's current standing in the polls into MPs at Westminster, the party's depute leader will pledge.
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DARD is facing cuts along with most other Stormont departments, apart from health, following a cut in the grant Northern Ireland gets from Westminster. Agriculture Minister Michelle O'Neill has said this will mean tough choices. In advance of a consultation paper to be published later this week, she has set out her spending priorities. They include funding for farmers in the most difficult areas, known in European Union terminology as Areas of Natural Constraint (ANCs). Ms O'Neill said she was also committed to policies to tackle poverty and isolation in rural areas. She said that as well as facing cuts, the industry needed to grow to deliver employment in agriculture and food processing. On that basis, the minister said she would retain funding for the farm development side of the Going for Growth strategy, a joint project run by her department and the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (DETI). Ms O'Neill also said that rural development funding for community-based Local Action Groups would be protected, once the 2014 to 2020 rural development plan was approved by the European Commission. She underlined that the cuts would not affect plans to decentralise many DARD functions, including the move of its headquarters to Ballykelly, County Londonderry, beginning in 2017. Staff will apply for redundancy to a central fund across all departments. It is believed that the scale of decentralisation within DARD will see a significant interest in the redundancy plan, particularly amongst senior staff based in Belfast. Asked about providing services with reduced staff numbers, Mrs O'Neill said ways would have to be found to deliver more from reduced resources. If this includes greater efficiency and fewer individual inspections as part of EU monitoring of Common Agricultural Police (CAP) spending, this will be welcomed by farmers as one positive result of the budget cuts. The minister confirmed that all three College of Agriculture Food and Rural Enterprise (CAFRE) colleges at Greenmount, Loughry and Enniskillen would remain open, but that they would face staff cuts. Research projects will be reassessed to focus on those likely to deliver the greatest short-term gain for the industry. The proposals will now go out for a six-week consultation.
The Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) is set to cut £30m from its annual budget, largely funded through 300 redundancies.
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The animals, many of them pregnant, were discovered on 7 March by farmer Gordon Wyeth in a field at West Dean Estate near Chichester. Sussex Police said they had narrowed down the time of the incident to a few hours on the morning they were found. Rustling or a low-flying helicopter have been ruled out as possible causes. The sheep had panicked and died either from shock or by being crushed. Sgt Tom Carter thanked people who had come forward with information about this "horrific event". "As a result, we now know that the sheep were alive around 10am on the Monday, only three to four hours before they were found dead. "We have ruled out the cause being a low-flying helicopter and while we have considered a suggestion that sheep rustlers may have been involved, we have had no other reports of rustling in Sussex and given the new timeframe, this makes it extremely unlikely. He urged people to keep their dogs on a lead in rural areas, adding: "A farmer can legally shoot a dog that is chasing livestock and seek compensation from the person responsible for the animal, so please don't take the risk." The flock died just north of the A286 at the eastern end of West Dean village. James Osman, the National Farmers Union adviser for Sussex, previously said he believed it was the worst incident of its kind in living memory.
A flock of 116 sheep thought to have been killed in the UK's "worst sheep-worrying attack in memory" died just three hours before they were found.
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The Duchess of Cornwall Inn, due to open in early 2016, is a joint development by the Duchy of Cornwall and brewer Hall & Woodhouse. The village, on Dorchester's outskirts, has been built according to the architectural ideas of Prince Charles. Launched in 1993, it is now home to 2,500 people and 170 businesses. The inn, being built in Queen Mother Square, will have 20 rooms. Prince Charles made the name suggestion to the brewery. Nick Timothy told the Daily Telegraph that Downing Street was also guilty of a breakdown in communication with both the public and Whitehall departments. The party clearly underestimated Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, he added. Mr Timothy resigned as the prime minister's joint chief of staff after the Tories lost their majority. He said: "If the party retreats into a comfort zone that we don't find very challenging, I worry that we will not only fail to address the challenges the country faces but we will also increase the chances of a hard-left government in five years' time." Mr Timothy was joint chief of staff alongside Fiona Hill, and co-wrote the Conservatives' manifesto going into the general election. He rejected reports that Mrs May had intended to sack Chancellor Philip Hammond if she increased her Commons majority. Mrs May is still prepared to walk away from Brexit talks without a deal, he added, but her hopes of reversing the ban on new grammar schools are over. Mr Timothy said plans for ministers to play a bigger part in the election campaign were overruled by party strategists. He conceded it "probably is true that there should have been more on the economy during the campaign". "Overall the lesson of the election for the party and for the government cannot be: 'Oh well, we tried that and we didn't win the election we were hoping for so let's not try it any more'," he said. "If the party retreats to a much more orthodox Conservative proposition then I worry that won't be sufficient to tackle the big problems that the country has and in five years' time we do risk the election of a dangerous left-wing alternative." Mr Timothy was interviewed by the Telegraph ahead of starting to write a weekly column for the paper.
The Prince of Wales has requested a new pub in the Duchy of Cornwall's village of Poundbury to be named after his wife. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Conservative Party should have campaigned for "change not continuity" in the general election, one of Theresa May's former leading advisers has said.
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The Scot told BBC Radio Nottingham he was not interested in signing former Reading and Leicester defender Mills, who is out of contract in the summer. Freedman worked with the 28-year-old when he was Bolton manager. "Matt Mills is a very easy story; he is a free transfer and I have worked with him before. But it's a false story," Freedman said. "I am in the market for a centre-half and he is somebody I admire and is a good guy but I have a wider range in my recruitment team to pick from." The blaze broke out at a home on Llangwm estate, near Penplas, in Penlan, just after midnight on Monday. The house was initially too unsafe to search, but the body of the woman who died - named locally as Linda Merron - has now been moved out of the property. A man and woman were taken to the city's Morriston Hospital with burns and smoke inhalation. A pet dog was also rescued. Floral tributes have been left on the front gate by neighbours. The cause of the blaze is being investigated by police and Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service. Neighbour Gina Norwood said the woman who lived at the house had been in poor health and had moved to the area within the last two years after her daughter came to study in the city. "She loved her animals, her dogs - she was a lovely lady. She always had time for you, to say hello to all her neighbours," she told BBC Wales. "My son woke me up screaming to get out of the house. I looked out of the window and I thought the flat was on fire. "My son came out of the front and it was all blowing out, the flames." Ms Norwood said she called the fire service initially and later an ambulance to treat the woman's daughter, whom she said had received burns to her body. Her son Karl said he had heard a series of bangs which alerted him to the fire just after midnight.
Nottingham Forest boss Dougie Freedman has ruled out a move for Bolton Wanderers centre-half Matt Mills. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A body has been recovered after a fire at a house in Swansea.
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Stephen Lennon, 30, from Luton, admitted possession of a false identity document with improper intention. Lennon used a passport in the name of Andrew McMaster to board a Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to New York, Southwark Crown Court was told. He entered the US illegally then used his own passport to return to the UK. Lennon had previously been refused entry to the US and used a friend's passport to travel to the country in September. He used a self check-in kiosk to board the flight at Heathrow and was allowed through when the document was checked in the bag-drop area. But when Lennon arrived at New York's JFK Airport, customs officials took his fingerprints and realised he was not travelling on his own passport. Lennon was asked to attend a second interview but managed to leave the airport, entering the US illegally. He stayed one night and travelled back to the UK the following day using his own legitimate passport, which bears the name of Paul Harris. Judge Alistair McCreath told him: "I am going to sentence you under the name of Stephen Lennon although I suspect that is not actually your true name, in the sense that it is not the name that appears on your passport. "What I have to deal with you for is clear enough. You knew perfectly well that you were not welcome in the United States. "You knew that because you tried before and you had not got in, and you knew the reason for that - because, rightly or wrongly, the US authorities do not welcome people in their country who have convictions of the kind that you have. "With that full knowledge, you equipped yourself with a passport. I am told that it was given you by way of a loan from your friend Andrew McMaster, to which you bore, I am told, some resemblance." The judge added: "What you did went absolutely to the heart of the immigration controls that the United States are entitled to have. "It's not in any sense trivial." In mitigation, Lennon's barrister Giles Cockings told the court the passport was not stolen and his client had only used it for a day. Lennon was jailed for assault in 2005 and also has convictions for drugs offences and public order offences, the court heard.
The leader of the English Defence League has been jailed for 10 months for using someone else's passport to travel to the USA.
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It happened at the Hilton Hotel, near Granary Wharf, at about 20:25 BST on Sunday, West Yorkshire Police said. The driver of the Ford Focus has been arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving and was taken to hospital for treatment to minor injuries. No-one else was injured and the force is appealing for witnesses to contact them.
A car has crashed through the doors into the foyer of a hotel in Leeds and the driver has been arrested.
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Canadian writer Kelly Oxford called on women to tweet their first experiences of sexual assault on Friday. She described five personal experiences of being assaulted, including on a bus at the age of 12. She continues to receive stories "every second". Many women tweeted under the #NotOkay hashtag. Women from around the world described being raped by public safety officers at university, groped by colleagues at work, stripped by police officers and molested by doctors, dentists and x-ray technicians. Many of the stories recounted described assaults that took place when the women were underage, some as infants. The exposure of "predatory males have made us stronger", Ms Oxford tweeted, adding "we realized the shame we carry is their shame". The tweets can be read here. Someone is sexually assaulted every two minutes in the United States, according to anti-sexual violence organisation RAINN. Nine out of every 10 rape victims are female.
Tens of thousands of women have been sharing their experiences of sexual assault on Twitter after a video showed US presidential candidate Donald Trump boasting about groping women.
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The 48-year-old was arrested on Tuesday after police received reports of a nine-year-old girl being grabbed outside a chemists in Queen Street, Market Rasen. There were also reports of a four-year-old boy being grabbed in a newsagents on the same road. No-one was hurt but both children were left shaken, police said. Det Insp Pete Grayson said: "These incidents will understandably be of great concern to the local community, to parents and to families, and I would like to make it clear that they are isolated and one-off occurrences. "We have a suspect in custody and are not looking for anyone else in connection with this investigation." Patrols have been increased in the area to provide reassurance. Seven members of their current squad had already committed themselves to the Pro12 club. Wilson, 26, and Harley, who is a year younger, were both born in England but have 16 and 17 caps respectively for Scotland. Kirkcaldy-born Fusaro, 26, has represented his country four times. All three players first signed for Warriors in 2010, with Harley so far making the most club appearances - 113 - since arriving from West of Scotland. The forward who has captained the side on a number of occasions was delighted to extend his stay with the club he supported before turning professional. "It was great to get a taste of the success we had last year, so my aim in the next two years is to keep winning trophies and push on in Europe," he said. "I'd like to use the excellent coaches we have here to improve my game and become a better player." Wilson, who joined Glasgow from Moseley, was looking forward to extending his 104 Warriors appearances. "This is my sixth season at the Warriors and I've loved my time here," he said. "Being involved at the Rugby World Cup with Scotland was incredible and I want to continue to play at the highest level. "By staying at Glasgow, I'll have the opportunity to do that." Fusaro, a product of Howe of Fife, has made 109 Warriors appearances and is also keen for more success. "Glasgow's been my only club since I started professional rugby and we've come on a long journey, but I still think we've got a lot further to go. "I signed the same year as Ryan and Rob and we've formed a tight-knit group in the back-row." Jonny Gray, Finn Russell, Pat MacArthur, Fraser Brown, Alex Allan, Sila Puafisi and Ali Price have also recently extended their Warriors contracts.
A woman has been arrested in connection with two attempted child abductions in a small Lincolnshire market town. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Scotland back-row forwards Rob Harley, Ryan Wilson and Chris Fusaro have penned new two-year contracts with Glasgow Warriors.
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Nick Timothy told the Daily Telegraph that Downing Street was also guilty of a breakdown in communication with both the public and Whitehall departments. The party clearly underestimated Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, he added. Mr Timothy resigned as the prime minister's joint chief of staff after the Tories lost their majority. He said: "If the party retreats into a comfort zone that we don't find very challenging, I worry that we will not only fail to address the challenges the country faces but we will also increase the chances of a hard-left government in five years' time." Mr Timothy was joint chief of staff alongside Fiona Hill, and co-wrote the Conservatives' manifesto going into the general election. He rejected reports that Mrs May had intended to sack Chancellor Philip Hammond if she increased her Commons majority. Mrs May is still prepared to walk away from Brexit talks without a deal, he added, but her hopes of reversing the ban on new grammar schools are over. Mr Timothy said plans for ministers to play a bigger part in the election campaign were overruled by party strategists. He conceded it "probably is true that there should have been more on the economy during the campaign". "Overall the lesson of the election for the party and for the government cannot be: 'Oh well, we tried that and we didn't win the election we were hoping for so let's not try it any more'," he said. "If the party retreats to a much more orthodox Conservative proposition then I worry that won't be sufficient to tackle the big problems that the country has and in five years' time we do risk the election of a dangerous left-wing alternative." Mr Timothy was interviewed by the Telegraph ahead of starting to write a weekly column for the paper.
The Conservative Party should have campaigned for "change not continuity" in the general election, one of Theresa May's former leading advisers has said.
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Up to five wells will be drilled before hook-up and commissioning activity starts on the Mariner A platform next summer. First oil is expected to be produced from Mariner in 2018. The pre-drilling campaign is expected to support about 500 jobs in the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS). Mariner, which lies about 93 miles (150km) east of Shetland, is one of the largest projects currently under development in the UKCS. The heavy oil field has reserves estimated at more than 250 million barrels of oil, with an average plateau production of about 55,000 barrels per day. Hedda Felin, managing director of Statoil Production UK, said: "This is an exciting period for us as a UKCS operator as we transition from the planning phase to active offshore operations. "Pre-drilling enables production to reach plateau levels more quickly after the start of operations on Mariner A. "It will also be an important learning period for us, in terms of understanding the reservoir and identifying potential efficiencies for future wells, with safety and the protection of the environment being our fundamental priorities." One of the world's largest jack-up rigs, The Noble Lloyd Noble, is currently positioned over the Mariner jacket, which was installed in 2015. The first production wells will be drilled through a well deck on the jacket. Up to five wells will be drilled before the platform topside modules arrive in mid-2017. They are currently under construction in South Korea. Statoil said that up to 100 reservoir targets could be drilled over the lifetime of the Mariner field, based on the current development strategy. The operator had hoped to get production under way next year. However, in October 2015 it announced it was postponing the start, citing delays at construction yards in South Korea. Statoil has a 65.1% stake in Mariner. It co-venturers are JX Nippon Exploration & Production (UK) Ltd (20%), Siccar Point Energy (8.9%) and Dyas Mariner Ltd (6%).
Production drilling has started in the massive Mariner oil field in the UK North Sea, operator Statoil has announced.
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Pilots went on strike at 02:00 GMT, and the action is due to continue until 22:59 GMT. Up to a third of cargo flights have also been cancelled, Lufthansa called the strike action by pilots' union, Vereinigung Cockpit, "completely incomprehensible". This is the 10th strike for the airline since April. The airline's pilots oppose plans to phase out an early-retirement scheme. Currently, pilots are able to retire at the age of 55 and receive up to 60% of their pay until the standard retirement age of 65. Almost 50% of long-haul flights from Frankfurt and Munich airports will remain grounded. Lufthansa Cargo will operate nine out of 15 flights. The airline said the flights that went ahead would be staffed by volunteer pilots. The strike comes as Lufthansa's board voted to push ahead with plans to expand its budget flight operations on Wednesday. And chief executive Carsten Spohr warned that further strikes as a consequence of the board's decisions might be something Lufthansa would "have to live with". As well as short-haul routes inside Europe, Eurowings will also offer long-haul flights in conjunction with SunExpress Germany, Lufthansa's joint venture on Mediterranean routes with Turkish Airlines. Lufthansa will initially lease three Airbus A330-200s, and flights to tourist destinations in Florida, South Africa and the Indian Ocean will start at the end of 2015 from Cologne. The board also approved the lease of up to seven A330-200s and Mr Spohr said if the plan was successful the airline would have no problem in expanding further He said he did not foresee any difficulty in finding pilots for the Eurowings expansion. "We hope that we won't have any more strikes for the sake of our passengers, shareholders and employees," he said. "But we have set the path so that Lufthansa can have a future and strikes are the consequence that we have to live with." Lufthansa has offered mediation with the pilots in the hope of resolving the dispute in time for Christmas. The airline is battling to remain competitive against budget carriers such as Ryanair and Easyjet and Gulf operators including Emirates, Etihad and Qatar on lucrative long-haul routes. It has already lost €160m (£125.5m) in operating profit as a direct result of the dispute over proposed changes to an early retirement scheme. Lufthansa is also not alone in struggling to cut costs to counter the threat to their survival from leaner rivals. Air-France KLM faced two weeks' of pilots strikes over its plans to expand its low cost carrier Transavia in September forcing it to backtrack on plans to expand. On Wednesday, it said a majority of its pilots now backed a deal to expand the company's low-cost operations in France, said more than 200 Air France pilots had volunteered to fill 72 positions at Transavia France.
German airline Lufthansa has cancelled almost half of its long-haul flights, as pilots strike for the second time in a week over retirement benefits.
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In a match reduced to 18 overs a side by rain, Willey smashed 60 off 27 balls to get Northants off to a flier. Cameron White (54 not out) and Alex Wakely (59 not out) added an unbroken 106 in 9.2 overs as Northants posted a formidable 194-2 at Edgbaston. Surrey were bowled out for just 92 as Willey claimed 4-9. In a performance to remember, the Northampton-born all-rounder also took a catch and ran out Surrey batsman Steven Davies in addition to his heroics with bat and ball. This is Northants' first one-day trophy since they beat Leicestershire in the final of the Natwest Bank Trophy final in 1992 His hat-trick provided a fitting finale for what has been an incredible campaign for Northants, who struggled badly in last year's competition and had won just three of their last 22 Twenty20 matches before the start of this season. The vast majority of the damage was done with the bat as Willey, White and captain Wakely put on an eye-catching display of big hitting under the lights in Birmingham. Northants looked well set on 37-0 midway through the fourth over before Richard Levi, hero of the semi-final win over Essex, was bowled by Azhar Mahmood. The rain, which had threatened for much of the day, finally arrived moments later, forcing the players off for the best part of an hour. But when the teams returned with four overs of the match lost, a lively Edgbaston crowd was immediately rewarded for its patience. Willey bludgeoned 20 off a Jade Dernbach over and soon after clubbed Jon Lewis high into the stands to complete a 19-ball half century - the fastest of this year's T20 competition. The 23-year-old was only opening after a wrist injury forced Kyle Coetzer out of the final and, although he was caught by Gary Wilson attempting one stroke too many off Lewis, his innings, which included four sixes and six fours, had set the tone. Northants' 194-2 was the highest total in a domestic Twenty20 final, surpassing the 187 made by Middlesex against Kent in 2008, despite facing only 18 overs Wakely and White continued to target the wayward Dernbach, who ended with figures of 0-53 having been instrumental in Surrey's semi-final win over defending champions Hampshire. And he was not alone in suffering the wrath of Northants' top order as Wakely smashed Azhar Mahmood's final ball for six to leave them strong favourites at the midway point. Surrey openers Jason Roy and Davies struggled to keep up with the required rate and, when Willey bowled the former for 13, it looked an uphill struggle for the Brown Caps. Davies was then brilliantly run out by Willey, who also caught Mahmood off Muhammed Azharullah, and the dangerous Glenn Maxwell (29) fell to Steven Crook (2-26). Zander de Bruyn and skipper Vikram Solanki came and went without seriously troubling the scorers as the contest quickly petered out. But Willey provided one memorable final flourish, having Zafar Ansari caught by Crook, Lewis taken by James Middlebrook and Chris Tremlett caught behind by a diving David Murphy to leave Northants celebrating their first piece of one-day silverware for 21 years. Match scorecard
David Willey ended the match with a hat-trick as Northamptonshire secured their first FLt20 title with a thumping 102-run victory over Surrey.
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The blaze has been raging at Alexandra Docks in Newport since 17:00 GMT on Saturday. South Wales fire service said it had broken out at a timber mill and 30 firefighters were at the scene. Residents are advised to stay indoors and keep windows and doors closed to avoid smoke and ash caused by the the blaze. Environment body Natural Resources Wales (NRW) said it was working with the site owners, fire service and Public Health Wales to minimise the impact of smoke. Sarah Jones, a consultant in environmental health protection, said: "Some people may experience symptoms such as nausea, headaches or dizziness as a reaction to odour, even when the substances that cause those smells are themselves not harmful to health."
About 2,000 tonnes of wood is on fire at a south Wales dockyard.
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One of the main treatments has become useless against the new strain of the sexually transmitted infection. Twelve cases have been confirmed in Leeds and a further four have been reported in Macclesfield, Oldham and Scunthorpe. However, there are likely to be more undiagnosed cases. The strain in this outbreak is able to shrug off the antibiotic azithromycin, which is normally used alongside another drug, ceftriaxone. Peter Greenhouse, a consultant in sexual health based in Bristol, told the BBC News website: "This azithromycin highly resistant outbreak is the first one that has triggered a national alert. "It doesn't sound like an awful lot of people, but the implication is there's a lot more of this strain out there and we need to stamp it out as quickly as possible. "If this becomes the predominant strain in the UK we're in big trouble, so we have to be really meticulous in making sure each of these individuals has all their contacts traced and treated." The outbreak started in March. The British Association for Sexual Health and HIV says all cases have been in heterosexuals and some have reported sexual partners from across England. Dr Jan Clarke, the organisation's president, told the BBC: "It was sufficiently serious to alert our whole national chain of clinics that there is the possibility that we've got a very resistant strain of gonorrhoea. "We are really skating on thin ice as far as treating gonorrhoea is concerned at the moment." The disease is caused by the bacterium called Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The infection is spread by unprotected vaginal, oral and anal sex. Of those infected, about one in 10 heterosexual men and more than three-quarters of women, and men who have sex with men, have no easily recognisable symptoms. But symptoms can include a thick green or yellow discharge from sexual organs, pain when urinating and bleeding between periods. Untreated infection can lead to infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease and can be passed on to a child during pregnancy. Gonorrhoea is the second most common sexually transmitted infection in England and cases are soaring. The number of infections increased by 19% from 29,419 in 2013 to 34,958 the following year. Dr Mike Gent from Public Health England said in a statement: "We can confirm investigations are under way. "Those affected are being treated with an alternative antibiotic, but the resistance to first-line treatment remains a concern. "The bacteria that cause gonorrhoea are known to mutate and develop new resistance, so we cannot afford to be complacent." He urged people to practise safe sex including the use of condoms. The outbreak in Leeds adds to growing concern that gonorrhoea is becoming untreatable. In 2011, Japan reported a case of complete resistance to cephalosporin-class antibiotics, which included the main treatment ceftriaxone.
Highly drug-resistant gonorrhoea is spreading in the north of England with an outbreak centred in Leeds, sexual health doctors have told the BBC.
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Filming for Transformers: The Last Knight, which stars Mark Walberg and Anthony Hopkins, will take place in Radcliffe Square until 23:00 on Sunday. Scenes were also reportedly shot at Blenheim Palace, which has previously provided a backdrop for the BFG and James Bond film Spectre, on Wednesday. The county council said driving scenes would briefly disrupt city traffic. Academy Award-winner Sir Anthony Hopkins said it was a pleasure to be back in the city, 23 years after filming Shadowlands, in which he played CS Lewis. He said: "I'm very excited about it, I'm very, very pleased." It said Turl Street, High Street and Catte Street would be affected and on Sunday Broad Street, Catte Street, Holywell Street, New College Lane and part of Parks Road will be closed. It has been suggested the fifth outing of the franchise about giant battling robots has a connection to the legend of King Arthur. The film is due to be released in cinemas next June. Scenes have already been filmed on the Isle of Skye and also at Alnwick Castle in Northumberland. It is produced by Paramount Pictures and directed by Michael Bay.
Scenes from the upcoming fifth film in the blockbuster Transformers series are being shot in Oxford.
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Lord Kinnock told me in an interview for BBC Radio 4's Analysis programme that to have any chance of winning, Mr Corbyn will have to stick with the present policy of multilateral nuclear disarmament. "No party can win a national United Kingdom election if it sustains a stance which means unilateral nuclear disarmament," he said. The former cabinet minister Peter Mandelson also claimed that for Labour to switch back to a unilateral policy would be electoral suicide. "The British public have never been and are never going to be unilateral nuclear disarmers. It is just something that you could never sign them up for," Lord Mandelson told me. Labour's present multilateral policy goes back nearly 30 years. The party lost to Mrs Thatcher's Conservatives in two landslide elections in 1983 and 1987 supporting a non-nuclear policy which many believe contributed to its defeat. Apart from Neil Kinnock and the party's communications director Mr Mandelson, one of those who engineered the policy change after the 1987 election was the party's defence spokesman, Martin O'Neill. He is also convinced that if the present Labour review comes out in favour of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament's position, Labour cannot win the next election. Lord O'Neill told me: "The Labour part of the British electorate, albeit declining, is still in favour of multilateralism." He is unimpressed by the argument that if Mr Corbyn changes his mind after a lifetime's support for CND it will tarnish his vote-winning image as an "authentic" politician who does not compromise. Lord O'Neill argues this is to confuse integrity with obstinacy. Labour's troubles with the bomb Labour Trident deal 'may be impossible' Trident: UK's nuclear weapons system A nuclear fault line has cut through the party ever since the post-war Labour prime minister Clement Attlee decided that Britain should construct its own, independent nuclear deterrent. The decision was never discussed by the full cabinet and that is a precedent which has been followed by Labour prime ministers whenever confronted with a serious split over nuclear weapons. It was not until 1983, under the leadership of one of the founders of CND, Michael Foot, that the party went into an election in support of unilateral disarmament, ready to do away entirely with nuclear weapons. Under Neil Kinnock, in the following election in 1987, which again produced a Tory landslide, this was still Labour's defence policy. It was only 18 months after this defeat, with Peter Mandelson now firmly established as Labour's chief spin doctor, that the policy was finally changed. To my surprise, Lord Kinnock revealed that throughout his first election campaign as Labour leader he was uncomfortable with the party's anti-nuclear policy. It seems he had wanted to change tack long before the 1987 election. Lord Kinnock told me: "From the early 1980s really, I'd recognised the unsustainability of the unilateral nuclear disarmament policy, and I was in the very uncomfortable position of having to try to sustain it." He admits that he decided to make the U-turn in large part because of Labour's electoral position. He is convinced that Mr Corbyn should follow in his footsteps. "I am not looking for anyone to blame," he says. "I am seeking the exercise of the skills of leadership, and they do require a combination of strength and assertiveness, because parties that are ill-disciplined simply don't enjoy the confidence and support of the electorate." In contrast, one of those involved in Labour's current policy review, Ken Livingstone, strongly backs Mr Corbyn's position. He is convinced that a majority of Labour MPs will support him over giving up nuclear weapons. But Mr Livingstone argues that when renewal of Trident comes up in the Commons, Labour MPs should be allowed a free vote, and not forced to follow the leadership line. "This is not the New Labour era of Blair and Brown where people are intimidated and threatened," he told the programme. All this, of course, is music to Conservative ears; to have the main opposition party badly split over a fundamental policy issue is just what they need to help counter the effect of their divisions over Europe. And they hold one of the most important cards: the Tories will decide when the vote on Trident renewal will be held. It may not be in their interest to do this quickly. David Cameron's referendum campaign will not be helped by highlighting Mr Corbyn's problems. After all, Labour's support for staying in the European Union could be crucial. But at some point, almost certainly this year, the vote will come and it may not only decide the future of Trident, it could also decide the future of Jeremy Corbyn. Analysis is on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 29 February at 20:30 or you can listen online or download the programme podcast.
Former Labour leader Neil Kinnock has issued a stark warning to Jeremy Corbyn that if he continues to oppose the renewal of the Trident missile system, Labour will lose the next election.
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Private cars with even and odd number plates would only be allowed on alternate days from 15 to 30 April, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said. A fortnight-long trial from 1 January took more than a third of the city's three million private cars off the road, easing congestion. However, it is not clear whether it helped to bring down pollution. The local government has said that the second phase of the "odd-even plan" would be "decisive" to ascertain its success as a pollution control measure and on whether it would be repeated every month. Friday is a public holiday so traffic on the city roads is sparse. The second phase of the scheme will be enforced by 2,000 traffic personnel, 580 enforcement officials and more than 5,000 civil defence volunteers. Those who violate the scheme will be fined 2,000 rupees (£21;$30) and the government has appointed a special task force to look into complaints of violations. Like the last time, emergency vehicles like ambulances, police cars, fire engines and taxis are exempt from the campaign. Single women and two-wheelers are also allowed to drive every day. Although the trial in January helped decongest traffic-choked streets, there is no clarity on whether it helped curb pollution. Authorities said there was "more than 50% drop in air pollution primarily caused by vehicular traffic". But the state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecasting and Research showed levels of PM 2.5 particulates - the most hazardous to health - hovering between "very poor" and "severe" and well above the World Health Organisation's safe limit. Correspondents say that during the trial in January, most drivers followed the restrictions and viewed the drive favourably. Delhi has 8.5 million vehicles and with car sales soaring in India, 1,400 extra cars are added to the capital's streets every day. In contrast, they were pleased that Jeremy Corbyn had shown his face. For him, that decision seems to have been a tactical win. If elections really are a game, he took the points today. But whether his performance will have the same impact on a wider audience, particularly undecided voters, is a different matter. In the spin room tonight where the press were watching and senior politicians were trying to claim victory for their competitor, it didn't feel like a wake or a celebration for any party in particular. None of the participants achieved a big breakthrough moment. But nor, crucially, did any of them have a cringing disaster. By polling day, tonight's event may be remembered more for the day that Mrs May didn't show, than anything that was actually said on the platform. Sir Cliff met officers by appointment and was not arrested or charged. It comes after police searched his home in Sunningdale, Berkshire, on 14 August as part of their investigation. The veteran pop star denies the alleged offence, saying the claim of an assault at a religious event in Sheffield in 1985 is "completely false". South Yorkshire Police confirmed it had spoken to a 73-year-old man. A police spokesman said: "The man was interviewed under caution but was not arrested. He entered South Yorkshire Police premises by arrangement." A spokesman for Sir Cliff said: "Today Sir Cliff Richard voluntarily met with and was interviewed by members of South Yorkshire Police. He was not arrested or charged. "He co-operated fully with officers and answered the questions put to him. "Other than restating that this allegation is completely false and that he will continue to co-operate fully with the police, it would not be appropriate for Sir Cliff to say anything further at this time." The BBC has been criticised for its coverage of the search after it found out about the operation in advance and sent cameras to Sir Cliff's home when officers arrived. The BBC has previously confirmed that its source relating to the police investigation was not the South Yorkshire force. The BBC says its journalists "acted appropriately" in its coverage but police have accused the corporation of a "cover-up" afterwards over what it had known. The bosses of both the BBC and the South Yorkshire Police have been summoned to appear before the Home Affairs Select Committee to explain how the broadcaster knew of the search in advance. The allegation against Sir Cliff relates to an assault claim at an event featuring US preacher Billy Graham at the Bramall Lane stadium in Sheffield in 1985, the BBC understands.
The Indian capital, Delhi, has begun a second round of car rationing, aimed at curbing high pollution levels. [NEXT_CONCEPT] At the end of the debate, some of the audience I spoke to were clearly pretty fed up that Theresa May hadn't turned up. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Sir Cliff Richard has been interviewed under caution in connection with an alleged historical sexual offence, South Yorkshire Police has said.
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Councils will post school closures on their websites, but the decision is taken by individual head teachers. Cardiff Airport has a live arrivals and departures board and Traffic Wales details any problems on the roads. Two Met Office yellow "be aware" warnings for snow are in effect throughout Wales on Thursday and there is also a chance of thundersnow. About 2cm (0.8in) of snow is possible on low levels, with 5cm-10cm (1.9in-3.9in) possible above 200m (656ft). Wrexham council said there could be disruption to some of its services. Lead member for environment and transport, David Bithell, said: "It is likely that services will not be affected, but members of the public will be kept appraised of any changes. "As the weather is checked daily from October, we are more than prepared for any increased gritting activity and have plenty of salt stocked." Denbighshire council said it had 3,600 tonnes of salt and would prioritise A and B roads, as well as having contracts with 25 firms to clear minor roads. The incident happened outside Asda at Riverview Drive, Dyce, on 26 April. Officers made inquiries into a video which was posted online and later removed. The teenager will be reported to the Youth Justice Management Unit. Police Scotland said the man involved in the incident had since been traced.
With warnings of snow showers across Wales from Thursday, there could be an impact on schools, travel and services. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A 14-year-old boy has been charged after an assault on a man in Aberdeen was posted on YouTube.
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Horn, a former schoolteacher, shocked Pacquiao, 38, with a unanimous 12-round decision on 2 July in Brisbane. The World Boxing Organisation reviewed the fight but judges backed the result in favour of 29-year-old Horn. It had been suggested the 11-time world champion might retire, but he wrote on social media: "I love this sport." Pacquiao's commitment to fight on means the rematch that was written into the contract with Horn means the pair are set to face each other in the ring again later this year. He wrote: "I love this sport and until the passion is gone, I will continue to fight for God, my family, my fans and my country." His supporters labelled the 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113 scoring as a "hometown decision" and the Philippines' Games and Amusement Board wrote to the WBO asking for a review of the bout. But on Tuesday the WBO said five independent judges had analysed the fight and gave the decision to Horn by seven rounds to five. The Antiquities of the Russian Empire was published in Moscow by order of Emperor Nicholas I between 1849 and 1853. The book, binding four volumes, had been owned by Birmingham City University which decided it was no longer relevant to research. It contains 508 plates of Russian artefacts including crowns, costume, weapons and jewellery. See more stories from Birmingham and the Black Country here Chris Albury, senior valuer for Dominic Winter, which handled the sale, said: "In book terms, it's quite a lot of money to pay." He said it "probably would have sold better if it was privately owned" as the ex-library copy was very much a working one, with "a few library stamps and not the prettiest binding". Only 600 sets were made and according to Mr Albury, the one formerly owned by the university could be unique because of its English title and contents pages. He said: "We haven't been able to find another copy with these pages anywhere else in the world." The book was the sole one in its lot. Another 199 books in a collection put up for auction by the university were divided into a further 29 lots. On Wednesday, one of these fetched £1,050, with more to go under the hammer on Thursday. The collection was built up from the mid-19th Century during the university's days as Birmingham College of Art, but the books are deemed no longer relevant to current teaching or research. Steve Rose, deputy director of library and learning resources, said it was a "stunning collection" and he was "sad to see the books leave". The proceeds are due to be reinvested. The toys were stolen from the 1st Sensory Legion Charity, which was storing them in a Peterborough garage. They were to be used to raise funds for its Feel the Force Day event, an annual sensory sci-fi convention for people with disabilities. The items were worth about £1,000. The Feel the Force Day event started in Peterborough in 2013 with 20 deafblind adults who wanted to learn about Star Wars. More news from Cambridgeshire The charity which runs it now holds three events each year, attracting 32,000 people from across the UK. However, plans have hit a setback after the break-in at the garage in Westwood between 7 and 11 August, where the toys were being temporarily stored. "Thieves not only made off with all the items we had planned on using for fundraising to help cover the costs of the next event, but also took various items we were looking to add to our sensory touch tables," co-founder Simon Howard said. The six inflatable radio-controlled Darth Vaders were worth about £50 each, and other items taken include "beanie" toys, Doctor Who and Hot Wheels toys, an interactive DeLorean Back to the Future car and a "pair of googley eyes in a white and green box". But they did leave a 5ft-tall Dalek behind. "The stolen items may not have a high financial value, but they are of enormous value to this organisation in supporting people," Mr Howard added. Feel the Force Day uses toys and props, tactile costumes and smell jars to help include those with disabilities, additional needs and sensory impairments in film and TV culture. Cambridgeshire Police has confirmed it is investigating the theft.
Former welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao says he will "continue to fight" despite his controversial defeat to Australia's Jeff Horn. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A library book complete with stamps has been sold at auction for £39,000. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Six inflatable Darth Vaders, a Star Trek Klingon gun and Doctor Who sonic screwdrivers are among items stolen from a charity ahead of a special event for people with disabilities.
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Gueye joined Villa for £9m from French side Lille in July 2015 and made 35 Premier League appearances as they were relegated last season. Villa were unable to retain him after the Toffees triggered a release clause in the 26-year-old's contract. New Everton manager Ronald Koeman said: "Idrissa will provide quality in our squad in the midfield." Koeman, who was appointed as Roberto Martinez's successor in June, added: "He was one of the players last season with the best record in interceptions and pressing in the midfield. We need this kind of quality and I'm happy to have him joining our club." Gueye made made 134 appearances for Lille, having emerged from the Diambars Academy in Senegal, and helped them to the French title in 2011. "My style is good for the Premier League," he said. "You have to fight every game. All the teams are strong and you have to concentrate all through the game. "Goodison Park is a very good stadium and the fans are very good, too. They push their team forward and I am excited to play there." Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
Everton have signed Senegal midfielder Idrissa Gueye from Championship side Aston Villa on a four-year deal.
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The Ferrari man is on a final warning from governing body the FIA after two 'road rage' incidents in seven months. Vettel, 30, banged wheels with Lewis Hamilton in Azerbaijan last month and swore at race director Charlie Whiting over the radio in Mexico last October. "Sebastian wears his heart on his sleeve," said Red Bull boss Horner. "He is involved in a very intense battle. He sees an opportunity to be champion again this year and he knows he's going to need everything going his way against Mercedes to achieve that. "He has zero filter between what he thinks and what he says or does sometimes. That's the great side of him. But sometimes it gets him in hot water as well." Horner was Vettel's boss at Red Bull for six seasons between 2009 and 2014, and had to deal with some difficult moments in that time. Vettel and team-mate Mark Webber crashed together in Turkey in 2010, while the German refused to obey team orders in Malaysia in 2013. Horner likened Vettel's uncompromising attitude to that of his hero Michael Schumacher, whose controversial driving tactics clouded his reputation throughout his career. "Sebastian has this huge desire within him," Horner said. "The records mean a lot to him. Michael Schumacher was very much his idol and I think what you see that bubbles over sometimes is that killer instinct of, 'I want to win'. Sometimes at all costs. "It comes across as spoilt but I think you've got to put yourself in his scenario, in his shoes. He has lifted Ferrari from where it was to where it is now and he has been a big driver in that." Horner said that the environment at Ferrari might be contributing to the increased number of such incidents involving Vettel. "Ferrari are an emotional team - Latin origins - it probably fuels that emotion," Horner said. "That's not to say it's a bad thing. It shows he's human at the end of the day and shows how hungry he is to achieve that ultimate goal. "[Ferrari president Sergio] Marchionne has his own style of management. He's quite a full-on character, quite outspoken. And the demeanour of a team comes from the top. The people who lead the team set the tempo. "You can feel Ferrari is a high-pressure place, particularly at this period of time." Horner said he felt Vettel could have been more severely punished for driving into Hamilton in Baku, an act motivated by the German's incorrect belief that the Mercedes driver had 'brake-tested' him. Vettel was given a 10-second stop-and-go penalty but Horner said officials could have disqualified him for the incident. "It's a difficult one, isn't it?" Horner said. "That's for the stewards to judge the penalties that were available to them. On the day it could well have been [a black flag]. Other drivers in other formulas have been and there's the precedent it sets. "But they chose the penalty they had. I think what was wrong was then to drag it on. I think it's important that everybody knows on the day what is the result, what is the punishment for that action." And he said that, away from the pressure of competition, Vettel was "a great character". "You don't see as much of his character perhaps in his current environment," Horner said. "He is a fun guy, he loves British humour, he's very good with the mechanics, the team. "He'd turn up here with chocolates for the receptionists and girls around the factory, he was always very generous in terms of not just gifting something to the race team, but to the whole factory. He'd spend hours signing stuff and really investing into the team." Horner said the title battle between Vettel and Hamilton had "a fascinating dynamic between two very different personalities and drivers". "Lewis is a bit more of a free spirit," Horner said. "He has a huge amount of natural talent. He probably doesn't think about his talent… or his application is probably different to Sebastian. "I have never worked with Lewis so I don't know but he relies on that natural instinct. "He jumps in and delivers and he is a bit like an artist. You can see he has mood swings as well. "Lewis is very out there, you know, lives the lifestyle that he does, whereas Sebastian is hugely protective and private, he almost enjoys a student-like existence. He is happy with his backpack and wants to keep family life very private and not let anyone know what he's doing away from the race track."
Sebastian Vettel's red-mist moments are caused by a killer instinct that means he is occasionally prepared to "win at all costs", says Christian Horner.
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The company also said revenue rose to $8.42bn, a 17% increase from the same period last year. Fox was helped by the success of the films X-Men: Days of Future Past, Rio 2, and The Fault in Our Stars. Shares in the company rose 2% in after-hours trading. "As we close the fiscal year, I continue to have confidence in our ability to execute our growth plan and drive value for our shareholders," said Mr Murdoch in a statement accompanying earnings. The Kuwait-born businessman and racehorse owner will take on the role from Martin Vickers. Koukash, 57, took over Salford in January 2013 when the club were in financial difficulty. "I've been involved in the club for the last three years and I really didn't take direct control of what goes on," he told BBC Radio Manchester. "It is a business I have now learnt a lot about and I want to try and put my business and commercial skills into action here and be involved in the day-to-day running of the club. "In terms of rugby, I assure everybody out there, I have no involvement in the boss (director of ruby Tim Sheens) as I call him, as he is the one who will make all of the decisions."
Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox reported profits of $999m (£624m) in the third quarter, buoyed by strong earnings in its film and cable television units. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Salford Red Devils owner Marwan Koukash is to take on chief executive duties at the Super League side.
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Dortmund boss Thomas Tuchel said the 27-year-old was left out for "internal reasons". Tuchel said "the matter is now settled" and Gabon forward Aubameyang will return to the side for Saturday's Bundesliga trip to Hamburg. His replacement Adrian Ramos scored the only goal against Sporting. Former Hertha Berlin striker Ramos rose to meet Matthias Ginter's cross and looped a header into the corner of the net. Aubameyang, dressed in a black coat, scarf and fedora hat, watched the match from the stands. Match ends, Borussia Dortmund 1, Sporting Lisbon 0. Second Half ends, Borussia Dortmund 1, Sporting Lisbon 0. Sebastian Rode (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Sebastián Coates (Sporting Lisbon). Offside, Sporting Lisbon. Adrien Silva tries a through ball, but Gelson Martins is caught offside. Offside, Borussia Dortmund. Adrián Ramos tries a through ball, but Lukasz Piszczek is caught offside. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Ezequiel Schelotto (Sporting Lisbon) because of an injury. Julian Weigl (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon). Julian Weigl (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon). Foul by Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund). Gelson Martins (Sporting Lisbon) wins a free kick on the right wing. Substitution, Sporting Lisbon. Lazar Markovic replaces Bryan Ruiz. Attempt missed. Bryan Ruiz (Sporting Lisbon) header from the left side of the six yard box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Ezequiel Schelotto with a cross. Attempt missed. Sokratis (Borussia Dortmund) header from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Marc Bartra with a headed pass following a corner. Corner, Borussia Dortmund. Conceded by Rui Patrício. Attempt saved. André Schürrle (Borussia Dortmund) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Marvin Zeegelaar (Sporting Lisbon) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Lukasz Piszczek (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Marvin Zeegelaar (Sporting Lisbon). Christian Pulisic (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Rúben Semedo (Sporting Lisbon). Attempt missed. Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Bryan Ruiz. Adrián Ramos (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Sebastián Coates (Sporting Lisbon). Substitution, Borussia Dortmund. Sebastian Rode replaces Mario Götze. Substitution, Borussia Dortmund. Lukasz Piszczek replaces Gonzalo Castro. Attempt missed. Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick. Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund). Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund). Gelson Martins (Sporting Lisbon) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Attempt saved. Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Adrián Ramos (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Sebastián Coates (Sporting Lisbon). Gonzalo Castro (Borussia Dortmund) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Adrien Silva (Sporting Lisbon).
Striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was dropped by Borussia Dortmund, who beat Sporting Lisbon to reach the last 16 of the Champions League.
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Councillors backed a fresh consultation at an extraordinary meeting on Thursday. The public will be able to have their say on the plans, which include changes to secondary schools in Fishguard and St Davids and the development of a new Welsh medium school, from 16 September. The consultation will close on 28 October. During that time, two public information sessions will take place - at Fishguard Town Hall on 24 September and Ysgol Dewi Sant, St Davids, on 29 September.
A new consultation on proposed changes to education in Pembrokeshire has been given the go-ahead.
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On the downside, for his apparent suggestion that a European super league might be an idea worth talking about, he has been called "a poster boy for greed" and even "a corporate goblin". Stillitano is the executive chairman of Relevant Sports, which organises the International Champions Cup, an annual summer tournament held mainly across the US - although other countries also host matches - featuring the world's top football clubs. But it was for organising a meeting of executives from Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool, Arsenal and Chelsea - where they discussed the possibility of restructuring the Uefa Champions League - that he found himself in the firing line. "It was not our [Relevant's] intention to be a stalking horse for the creation of a European Super League, that was never the intention," he tells me. "I would never advocate a closed-shop Champions League or any closed European league. I know it sounds cliched but I was misquoted, or rather I was asked a question about whether closed leagues can ever work. "And in some circumstances they can - look at NFL American football, one of the most successful leagues in the world. But I know that closed leagues are anathema in Europe." The 57-year-old says discussions about the format of European football first emerged because clubs came to him and asked if the Champions Cup could become more than just a pre-season event, and be put on a more official footing. "So things were coming about more as a reaction to teams approaching us," he says. "We caused a stir unintentionally. And clubs are still coming up to us. "Anyway, the big European clubs ended up cutting new commercial and sporting deals, including the changes at Uefa with the Champions League," he adds, referring to the deal where bigger nations such as England are guaranteed more places. Stillitano's partner in the International Champions Cup is US billionaire and Miami Dolphins American football team owner, Stephen Ross. Indeed, he says it is Ross's lack of a traditional soccer background that has enabled him to put together some of the bigger Champions Cup matches. "We brokered the biggest game, the Real Madrid v Barcelona Clasico, in Miami this summer," he says. "Steve Ross has the advantage of not being a massive soccer follower, so he just said 'let's get it' without even considering it might not be possible. "From the beginning Mr Ross and his business partner Matt Higgins could see there was something out there, a huge untapped soccer market. "The Champions Cup sits in a nice pre-season niche. It gives us the opportunity to own the month of pre-season, and build a viable business. "We get to show the best players in the world, and they are able to perform in a relaxed atmosphere without the the pressure of a regular season game. It allows the teams to build for their seasons." The tournament has just completed its fifth year, with Ross investing roughly $100m over the period since 2013. "We are making money out of it, we have turned the financial corner, I think the investment has paid off," says Stillitano. "I know it is not a Champions League or regular season games. But the fans love it and lots of cities and clubs would live to have Champions Cup games to host. "We are helping to cultivate the new US soccer fan. The biggest crowd ever for a Manchester United v Real Madrid game was in America this summer. Clearly we have something that has caught the imagination of the US sporting public." Son of Italian parents from Calabria Grew up watching Italian and German football on cable TV AC Milan fan, favourite player was 1970s star Gianni Rivera First English game: Leicester City v Aston Villa in March 1976 Director of Giants Stadium at the 1994 World Cup In 1996 became general manager of MLS team New York/New Jersey MetroStars (later Red Bulls) Set up Champions World series of games in the US featuring major European teams in the 2000s Friends with Sir Alex Ferguson and Jose Mourinho Stillitano says the next step is to make the event more of an entertainment property. "We saw it for the first time in Miami with the Clasico," he says. "We had legends games, concerts, activities for kids. That is something we want to expand, make it a fun day out, not just the match. The NFL Super Bowl is currently the only event that gets that mix right. "The next part is also to attract more cities to take part - Singapore is a good example of a city that has come on board with us." Games have also been held in England, Italy, Spain, Canada, Mexico and China; Mr Stillitano says there is interest in Argentina, Brazil, the Middle East, and South Africa. "It is good for the economies of host cities," he says. "Three quarters of the people who came to the Miami Clasico were from out of state. And there were 70,000 at the game, and 40,000 at the training sessions." So, does this growth signal that the Champions Cup is indeed ripe for becoming a part of the official football calendar? "Different people own different football spaces... but things change," he says. "Look at how Fifa decided they wanted to take over the old Intercontinental Cup, and moved in on it. "However, are we going to morph into something more official? I don't think so." Two-tier system And on the subject of competitions morphing into something else, Stillitano has a final riposte for those who accused him of trying to set up a closed-shop European league. "I think we are already in danger of creating a closed league, through financial fair play," he says, referring to Uefa rules which generally mean clubs can only spend what they make, and break even. "It means there are five, six, clubs that are wealthy enough to dominate the Champions League over the next 20 years - the likes of Paris Saint Germain, Manchester City, Barcelona, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich. "A Celtic or Ajax will never win the cup again, while the likes of AC Milan, Atletico Madrid, Juventus, and other historic big names are condemned to almost second tier status." He laughs: "But I am the one who got all the trouble and criticism!"
US soccer promoter Charlie Stillitano has been called many things in the past 18 months or so - with "power broker" and "mogul" among the more flattering descriptions of the ebullient New Yorker.
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Andrew Coates, 41, and assistant Polly Connor, 46, were preparing a display for a wedding reception near the shore of Lake Windermere when they died. The wedding was held in the grounds of a luxury cottage in Ecclerigg, Cumbria, on 30 August 2014. Explosions were heard three miles away, the hearing in Kendal was told. It happened about 30 minutes after John Simpson, 61, wed Nicole Rothwell, 44. Firefighters were called to Larch Cottage in mid-afternoon where they found the bodies of father-of-one Mr Coates and mother-of-three Mrs Connor, both from Kendal, near the entrance of an outbuilding. Giving evidence Stewart Myatt, a fireworks expert from the Health and Safety Laboratory, said he could not find any evidence to say how any of the fireworks ignited. The "most likely sequence of events" was a firework shell penetrated a partitioned wooden wall from outside and hit the back of a metal cabinet in the storeroom before bursting into flames, he told the hearing. The outbuilding was an L-shaped single-storey wooden construction split into three compartments, also containing a garage and another storage room. Mr Myatt said: "Going through the wall, through the cabinet and exploding seems to be the most likely, plausible mechanism where the people that were in there were rendered unconscious immediately, not able to do anything, not even to run to the door." He thought Mr Coates, a builder, and Mrs Connor, a plumber and former racehorse work rider, would have entered the storeroom to either find shelter from exploding fireworks outside or to get firefighting equipment. Mr Coates and insurance broker Mr Simpson were friends and had launched a joint business venture, Stardust Fireworks, with Mr Coates asked to organise the pyrotechnics for the wedding. Both men were described as "incredibly safety conscious". The inquest at Castle Green Hotel in Kendal continues with the jury expected to retire to consider its conclusions later.
Fireworks display organisers "most likely" lost consciousness when a single firework flew into a storeroom and exploded, an inquest jury heard.
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Video footage from Thursday's concert in Edmonton shows the singer, whose real name is Marvin Lee Aday, falling on stage during his performance. A post on his Facebook page said he collapsed due to severe dehydration. He was admitted to hospital for routine tests, and additional tests are being performed but he is described as "responsive and recovering well". The message extended "his heartfelt thanks for everyone's support and well wishes" and said he is "expecting a speedy and full recovery". Earlier in the week, the singer had cancelled shows in Moose Jaw and Calgary because of ill health. Rescheduling of concert dates have yet to be announced. The 68-year-old is one of rock's most successful recording artists, with hits including Bat Out of Hell. He was performing another hit, I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That), when he dropped his microphone and fell to the floor on Thursday evening. BBC Meat Loaf artist page Musicians went to his side to help and the music stopped. A spokesman for Alberta Health Services said a patient had been transported from the auditorium to a hospital. Fans said they initially believed his collapse could have been a planned part of his performance, the Edmonton Journal newspaper reported. The Northern Jubilee Auditorium in Edmonton was cleared shortly afterwards and ambulances were seen outside the venue, the newspaper said. Meat Loaf previously collapsed in 2003 at a performance in London, and again in 2011, during a July concert in Pittsburgh - an incident which he later blamed on an asthma attack. The singer's album Bat Out of Hell has sold more than 43 million copies worldwide and continues to sell an estimated 200,000 copies annually nearly 40 years after it was released.
US rock star Meat Loaf is "stable and in good condition" after collapsing on stage during a concert in Canada.
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Hosuton has made 56 Premiership appearances for Bath since joining from French side Colomiers in February 2013. The 29-year-old former Warratahs and Queensland Reds player has never been capped by Australia. "You can see exactly why somebody like Michael Cheika would be interested in trying to get him back," Hatley said. "But Leroy's contracted for this year and he's got another year to go. "He's been an unbelievable addition to our squad and to the club and, like I said, he's got this year and another year to run and we'd like him to stay beyond that." The Czech winger, 44, produced an assist in the Panthers' 3-1 defeat to reach a total of 1,888 career points. Jagr is now clear of the late Gordie Howe (1,850) and a point ahead of Mark Messier in the all-time standings. However, Jagr, who has played for eight NHL sides since 1990, trails NHL legend Wayne Gretzky by 969 points. He would have had a higher NHL tally had he not moved to play in Russia for three years between 2008 and 2011. Thursday's game at the BB&T Center in Florida was stopped after the Panthers' goal, allowing Jagr to receive a commemorative golden stick from the team. "I appreciate everything... over my hockey career, and I thank the fans," said Jagr, who began his NHL career in 1990 when he was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Bruins moved third in the Eastern Conference with the win, while the Panthers are fifth. The Pensions Regulator said the club did not put eligible workers into the government's workplace pension scheme, despite being warned in August 2014. Charles Counsell, from the watchdog, said: "We're very keen employers get this done so that employees get the pension that they're due." Swindon Town said it is now compliant with the pension rules. Mr Counsell, the executive director of automatic enrolment, added: "They had plenty of time to do it and we were in communication with them a lot in the period until that point (in August 2014)." The notice to comply with pensions was made in August 2014, with a deadline to enrol staff by 17 October 2014. A spokesman from the club said the fine was "unfortunate". He added: "The fine related to the period when the ownership of the club was being contested by the former chairman and is yet another painful example of the severe adverse consequences that the uncertainty and instability caused in regularising the business affairs of the club. "The club is now completely up to date and compliant with its pension obligations and contributions." Although the club is now compliant, it will still need to pay off the fine and make back-dated pension contributions. He won for his role as Scorpius Malfoy in 'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' at London's Palace theatre. The show, a sequel to JK Rowling's Harry Potter novels, has been a critical and commercial success. The Olivier awards are the most prestigious awards in British theatre. Boyle, 22, is from west Belfast and his family still live in the area. He is a former pupil of De La Salle College and St Louise's Comprehensive College. His win was announced at the award ceremony in London's Royal Albert Hall. Speaking immediately afterwards, Boyle thanked his family for their support. "I didn't think I was going to win, so I didn't even write a speech!" He said. Boyle won the coveted award ahead of nominees Rafe Spall, Brian J Smith and Freddie Fox. The visiting supporters are alleged to have set off fireworks and caused other crowd disturbances. It is the 10th time in the past five years the club have been charged by European football's governing body regarding their fans' behaviour. Uefa's disciplinary body will examine the case on 23 February. It is Celtic's second Uefa charge this season. They were fined 10,000 euros (£8,535) after the Glasgow side's supporters displayed Palestinian flags during their Champions League qualifier against Israeli side Hapoel Be'er Sheva in August. The draw in Manchester saw the hosts progress to the last 16 in second place, while Celtic finished bottom of the group.
Bath coach Neil Hatley wants to keep number eight Leroy Houston despite reports Australia coach Michael Cheika wants him to play in Super Rugby. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jaromir Jagr became the second highest points scorer in NHL history as his Florida Panthers side lost to the Boston Bruins on Thursday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Swindon Town Football Club has been fined £22,900 for failing to meet government pension rules. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Belfast actor Anthony Boyle has been named best actor in a supporting role at the Olivier awards. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Uefa have charged Celtic in connection with crowd trouble during the 1-1 draw at Manchester City in the Champions League on Tuesday.
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England's Hawkins lost the opening frame, but was never behind after that and went 9-3 ahead after five century breaks - 114, 102, 129, 141 and 128. But the world number 12 was pegged back by the Welshman, who rattled off four consecutive frames. Day, seeking a first ranking title, was ahead again in the next, but missed a routine red and Hawkins capitalised. "I felt so good and all credit to Ryan, he stuck in there. I was delighted to get a chance and hold myself together. I just feel relieved," said Hawkins. It was a third ranking title for Hawkins, 37, who picked up a first prize of £100,000. He won the 2012 Australian Open and the Players' Championship - also at Preston's Guild Hall - in 2014.
Barry Hawkins won the World Grand Prix title after surviving a comeback from Ryan Day to triumph 10-7 in Preston.
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The micro blogging firm warned that it expected the negative impact on its revenue to continue for the rest of the financial year. "It is still early days for these products," said Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo. The firm reported revenues of $436m, up 74% year-on-year, but below forecasts. It also reported a net loss of $162m, an increase from the same period a year ago when it lost $132.4m. However, monthly users of the service increased 18% year-on-year, totalling 302 million for the first quarter. Mr Costolo said the firm remained confident in the firm's "long-term opportunity". "We have a strong pipeline that we believe will drive increased value for direct response advertisers in the future," he added. Twitter also said it was buying marketing technology firm TellApart, and announced a deal with Google to improve its advertising performance measurement. The firm said it expected revenue for the full year to be between $2.17bn to $2.27bn, lower than the $2.3bn to 2.35bn range it forecast in December. Shares fell 18% after the results were released earlier than expected and before US markets closed. Fed up with poor Thai food when visiting other countries, Yingluck Shinawatra came up with the idea of a machine to rate food samples against authentically-prepared dishes. The food robot was due to be unveiled in Bangkok on Tuesday. It is part of a growing trend to use computers to analyse food. The machine, dubbed e-delicious, has ten sensors which create a chemical signature for food, which is then measured against a gold standard recipe, as approved by 120 taste testers. According to the website, the machine is composed of three parts: "An electronic nose for measurement of smell by an array of 16 gas sensors, an electronic tongue that allows us to measure sourness, sweetness, saltiness, spiciness, and a central processing unit that gathers data and interprets the result." Each test takes no more than 30 minutes. Thai food is one of the world's most popular cuisines but, according to the website, "the flavours of Thai food in many restaurants and in hotels abroad are deviating from the authentic ones." The government, which was ousted by a military coup in May, was so concerned about the idea of inferior Thai food that it set up the Thai Delicious committee and gave it $100,000 (£61,000) to build the machine. Each recipe has had its chemical make-up recorded in a database to compare with other versions. Food samples are inserted into the box to be analysed and are rated out of 100. In the case of a Thai green curry, the dish will be tested to ensure it has the right mix of basil, curry paste and coconut cream. The team from the Thai Delicious committee has also created an app with authentic recipes for chefs to use.
Twitter has reported lower than expected revenue for the first three months of the year, saying that new products sold less well than forecast. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A machine that can scientifically evaluate the make-up of Thai food has been developed with the help of the country's ex-prime minister.
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But Kezia Dugdale, who has been a critic of Jeremy Corbyn, insisted it included "a lot of really good ideas". The document includes policies on renewing Trident nuclear weapons and opposing Scottish independence. The SNP said the document showed the "chaos inside Labour", while the Conservatives said it was a "shambles". The manifesto had been due to be finalised at a Labour meeting on Thursday, before being unveiled early next week. But a draft version was obtained by media outlets, including the BBC, on Wednesday evening. Labour's shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, has said he does not know who was behind the leak, which he called "disappointing". Ms Dugdale told BBC Scotland that she had been "working very closely with the UK-wide team" on creating the manifesto, and said it was "very far from ideal" that it had been leaked. The final contents of the manifesto were said to have been unanimously agreed at a meeting of the party's national executive committee (NEC) on Thursday afternoon. Ms Dugdale did not take part in the meeting as it clashed with first minister's questions in the Scottish Parliament. Speaking ahead of the NEC meeting, she added: "There's a lot of really good, solid ideas in there that all deserve to have their own ideas discussed in the pubs and town centres and streets of the country. It is a shame it has all been leaked in that sense." According to the draft, Labour would: The document also says Labour supports the renewal of Trident nuclear weapons, which are based on the Clyde, but that any leader should be "extremely cautious" about using the weapons - which are opposed by Mr Corbyn. It commits Labour to opposing a second Scottish independence referendum, saying the party will "campaign tirelessly to ensure that the desire to remain a part of the UK is respected". And it pledges to establish a Scottish National Bank, "under Scottish control", and backed by the National Investment Bank with £20bn of lending power to deliver funds to local projects and Scotland's small businesses. Ms Dugdale said the renationalisation of rail and energy companies would "come with a price tag". But she insisted: "The reality is that this is the message we have heard from the British people. "They want to see these services work in their interests - they are fed up of private profits being the number one priority of the Tory government. "That is why this represents a radical transformational plan for our country, and it is one that every labour candidate will be proud to stand behind." Scottish Labour opposes Trident renewal - although Ms Dugdale has been in favour - but she said it had not been overruled by the UK-wide party. And she said Mr Corbyn had made his opposition to both independence and a second referendum "very clear" as it would bring "turbo-charged austerity" in the form of "£15bn of additional cuts". Responding to the manifesto leak, SNP candidate Tommy Sheppard said it demonstrated how "divided and chaotic the Labour party are". He added: "Most of their MPs do not even support these policies. "By contrast, the SNP have a strong track record of delivering for the people of Scotland, who are already benefitting from policies such as no tuition fees, free school meals, and votes at 16 - often in the face of resistance from Labour in Scotland. "In particular, Labour have broken every manifesto promise they have made on tuition fees, so no one will believe a word they say now." Scottish Conservative candidate Miles Briggs said: "Labour's leaked manifesto claims the party is opposed to a second referendum - yet we know Jeremy Corbyn has said he is "absolutely fine" with a referendum. "Just as Labour can't seem to publish a manifesto properly, nor can we trust a word they say on the Union." Tom Brake, the Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman, said: "This manifesto became meaningless the day Jeremy Corbyn ordered his MPs to vote with the Conservatives and UKIP to give Theresa May a blank cheque on Brexit."
The leaking of a draft copy of Labour's general election manifesto is "far from ideal", the party's Scottish leader has admitted.
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The 430 sq km (166 sq miles) park is home to the largest concentration of the world's remaining one-horned rhinoceros. Pictures showed park staff members examining and then transporting the calf through the park. It is not known where the calf's mother is, but poaching is a common problem in Kazaringa. Local media estimate that 12 rhinoceros were killed by poachers since January this year.
Indian wildlife authorities have rescued a three-day-old baby rhinoceros wandering around the Kaziranga national park in the north-eastern state of Assam.
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The protestors interrupted a service held at Gosford Anglican Church on the Central Coast of New South Wales state. A group of about 10 people entered the church and pretended to pray while playing Muslim prayers over a loudspeaker. Local police are investigating what the church described as a "racist stunt". The Party for Freedom posted photos and video of the incident on social media, claiming it was a demonstration against the church's support for Islamic leaders and multiculturalism. The organisation has ties to Senator Pauline Hanson's anti-immigration One Nation party, which has won four seats in Australia's Senate. "We want to share Islam with you, this is the future," one of the protesters said in the footage. "This is cultural diversity, mate. The rich tapestry of Islam that we'd like to share with Father Rod, and the congregation, and the social justice agenda we hear all the time." More than 24 hours after the altercation, One Nation released a statement saying that it did not have any official affiliation with the Party For Freedom. Father Rod Bower said the incident at his church terrorised the congregation. "They were shocked," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "I worked out who it was fairly quickly. Some of the congregation was quite traumatised." The church is known for spreading pro-immigration messages on its billboard and in services. The far-right nationalist group warned the congregation not to promote Islam. "[The protest] was simply because we support the Muslim community, we try and build bridges," Fr Bower said. "To come into sacred space, to violate that space as Christians were celebrating the ultimate act of love … to bring hate into that space is a deep violation. It just galvanises our conviction." Party for Freedom founder Nick Folkes said the group had about 450 members and has ambitions to register as a political party. The group was previously refused permission to mark the 10th anniversary of the 2005 race riots in the Sydney beachside suburb of Cronulla.
Right-wing protestors dressed in mock Muslim outfits and chanting anti-Islamic slogans have stormed a church service on Australia's east coast.
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The memo, dated 11 January, said those who were already married to foreigners should declare this within a week. It said failure to do so would "attract disciplinary action". Police spokeswoman Esther Katongo said: "Issues of security are delicate. If not careful, spouses can be spies and can sell the security of the country." Ms Katongo told the BBC that a standing order had been issued, notifying police officers of the measure, but that the ban itself was not new. She said officers had previously obeyed the ban but the new order had been thought necessary because some police had begun ignoring it. "There are a few officers who have started marrying foreigners," she said. "They are ignoring the previous requirement and this is why another standing order has been passed to remind officers what they are supposed to do and not supposed to do." She said it was likely officers who had married foreigners would now be given "some rules they should follow". Asked why such measures were necessary, Ms Katongo said: "When you get married, they say that you are one. You know what marriage is - you share secrets. And you can tell officers 'do not disclose' but you have no control. You won't be in their homes to always check on them. "The security of the nation is what is paramount."
Police in Zambia have been banned from marrying foreigners, according to a memo by police inspector general Kakoma Kanganja circulating on social media.
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But they had to settle for silver in the men's singles and men's fours. Bex Craig, Lorraine Malloy, Stacey McDougall and Claire Johnston beat their Welsh counterparts 18-14. Darren Burnett lost 21-15 to England's Jamie Walker, while Stewart Anderson, Neil Speirs, Paul Foster and Alex Marshall were beaten 15-14 by Jersey. Scotland picked up medals in seven of the eight categories during the two weeks of competition in Cyprus. It means that they have qualified a place for all eight events at the 2016 World Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand, although it does not necessarily mean the players who won medals in Cyprus will be in the team. Bowls Scotland high-performance manager Rhona Howie told BBC Scotland: "Our first goal of the Atlantic Championships was to qualify for the next year's World Championships and we achieved that in all eight disciplines. "But also to go on and win seven out of eight medals was a great performance by the Scottish squad. "The team produced some outstanding performances over the last fortnight, especially on the ladies' side. "This is a new ladies' squad, just formed in September, so it really was a great achievement to see them perform so well and to win so many medals." Last weekend, Craig and Johnston took bronze in the ladies' pairs after losing their semi-final against Cyprus. However, they did even better as part of the women's fours, defeating Laura Daniels, Jess Sims, Kath Pearce and Anwen Butten of Wales in their final. Johnston said: "That's the first time we have played as a four. "We gelled well together and played together well. We just got stronger and stronger as the week went on. "I was hoping to win a medal, whatever colour it may be. So I was delighted to get the bronze last weekend, and to get the gold a week later was phenomenal." Also last weekend, Burnett, along with Stewart Anderson and Speirs, won gold in the men's triples, while Commonwealth Games gold medallists Foster and Marshall had to settle for silver in the men's pairs. Foster and Marshall, who have both won several world indoor singles titles, were also unable to repeat their Glasgow 2014 success in the fours as their team was edged out by Greg Davis, Scott Ruderham, Cyril Renouf and Gus Hodgetts. Burnett, the Scot who is ranked seventh in the world indoors and also took gold in the singles in Glasgow, was beaten this time by in-form Walker, who won England's national championship this year.
Scotland won gold in the women's fours and also took the men's overall team title at the Atlantic Bowls Championships in Cyprus.
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Scientists examined the best ways of checking for non-native wildlife for a report commissioned by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH). An estimated 58 invasive species cause at least £40m worth of damage a year to UK marine industries, the report said. The harmful wildlife include algae and Pacific oysters. The scientists tested several techniques for monitoring non-native species at sites on Scotland's west coast, including Loch Fyne and Firth of Lorn, and the Firth of Forth on the east coast. Objects checked for alien life included the submerged bottoms of Northern Lighthouse Board navigation buoys. The report has recommended that a network of sites could be surveyed for the presence of invasive plant and animal life.
Marinas, fish farms and navigation buoys could be regularly monitored to help provide early warnings of the spread of invasive marine species.
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The Meaningful Chocolate Company redesigned its purple advent box after a warning from its lawyers. The advice followed Cadbury's victory in a dispute with rival Nestle over its rights to purple packaging. But Rt Revd Stephen Cottrell said the confectionary giant should not be "so precious over purple". Cadbury said it was protecting its trademark from other chocolate firms. Bishop Stephen spoke out out after the Warrington-based Fairtrade chocolate company designed chocolate Christmas tree decorations with stickers telling the story of Christmas. The decorations were to come in an advent purple box bearing a picture of Mary and Jesus on the front. Bishop Stephen urged Cadbury to "relax", adding: "Cadbury should reflect that before they even existed, the colour purple was around and - perish the thought - after they have gone, it will still be here. "Fighting some battles, even ones you win, can actually be demeaning. Far better to be generous, then no one loses," said Bishop Stephen. David Marshall, of the Meaningful Chocolate Company, said: "We have been legally advised that we were on dodgy ground this year because we were using 'advent purple' for our Christmas products and 'advent purple' now belongs to Cadbury. "For this reason we have changed the packaging of our religious Christmas Tree Decorations. This year advent is a warm red," said Mr Marshall. Cadbury said its dispute with Nestle was to protect the Cadbury purple associated with its milk chocolate. "We are not seeking to trademark 50 shades of purple, it is about making sure that the consumer is not confused into thinking this is a Cadbury product - that is the nature of a trademark," a spokesman for Cadbury said. "We are not seeking to be precious about the colour purple," he said.
A legal row between Cadbury and a small confectioner over the use of the colour purple on packaging was "demeaning", a senior Essex church figure has said.
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It happened at about 23:50 BST on Sunday after a fight began on the dance floor. The suspect is believed to have left in a taxi outside James Street South. He was with a female at the time. He is described as being 5ft 7in (173cm) tall with short dark hair and a tattoo on his neck. Police are appealing for anyone with information to come forward. The shooting happened in Braithwaite Road, Sparkbrook, at about 23:30 BST on Thursday. The 22-year-old man remains in a stable condition in hospital. West Midlands Police said three men aged 20, 21 and 25, have been arrested in connection with the shooting. The busy Stratford Road at the junction of Bordesley Middleway and Braithwaite Road has been cordoned off while forensic investigations take place. See more stories from across Birmingham and the Black Country here Teacher Rich Thomson, 30, was left with a bruised leg and cuts to his hands after he hit it on the head. No other incident of this type has happened to surfers in UK waters, according to experts who said the shark could have been a smooth hound. Mr Thomson said the shark, estimated at about 1m (3ft) long, "grabbed me on the leg". "I turned round and saw this little shark was on my thigh and wriggling its head side to side," said the seasoned surfer. "I hit it on the head and it swam off. "My hand was cut to pieces." He believes his thick winter wetsuit protected him from worse injury. "I had a quite a sizeable bruise about three inches across," he said. Source: European Federation of Sea Angler "I went home and told my wife I was late because I had been bitten by a shark," he said. "She said 'I've heard that one before', but it was true." "It won't stop me going back in the water and it shouldn't stop anyone, I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time." Ali Hood, director of conservation at the Plymouth-based Shark Trust, said the small shark "would likely have been disorientated" by the "turbid, dynamic water" of the river mouth. "British waters are home to a wide diversity of sharks with a number of coastal species such as smooth hound, tope and cat sharks often reported by beachgoers and water users," she said. Marc Dando, wildlife publisher and illustrator, said he thought the shark was probably a smooth hound. But neither he nor Ms Hood had heard of a shark of any sort biting a surfer in British waters. "It would be a shock because all sharks have powerful jaws," Mr Dando said. "All sharks can be very territorial. It was probably just telling the person to go away and struck out." Pupils at Kinsgbridge Community College, where Mr Thomson teaches chemistry, have bought him shark ties and have dubbed him "Sharkbait" and "Nemo". "I have never caught any fish while fishing but the biggest one I've ever caught attached itself to my leg," he said.
A man in his 30s has had part of his ear bitten off in a bar on Amelia Street in Belfast city centre. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been shot in the shoulder on a Birmingham street, police said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A surfer said he fought with a "small shark" after being bitten off Bantham beach in south Devon.
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After appeals from the country's president for international aid, the first supplies, donated by Ireland to Plan International, have now arrived. The southern Dosso region has been worst affected, with over 10,000 homes destroyed according to the UN. The capital Niamey was also hit when the River Niger burst its banks, flooding the city's suburbs. Plan International's Niger director Rheal Drisdalle said on 18-19 August, the river reached levels "not seen since the 1920s". "As the river has not been this high for a very, very long time, people had built their houses near to the river - and then all the rice paddies along the river have been flooded," he told the BBC. At last count, the United Nations' Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said that the floods have destroyed 14,000 homes and 7,000 fields of cereal crops across the country. The West African country is already suffering from severe food shortages caused by recent drought. President Mahamadou Issou pledged 1,400 tonnes of food and 900,000 euros (£712,443) in aid for people affected by the flooding, but admitted that it would not be enough and called for international help. The first international aid - 35 tonnes of supplies on a plane chartered by Ireland - arrived on Sunday. Mr Drisdalle said the United Nations and other aid agencies were trying to raise funds to send further supplies. Other West African countries have also experienced higher than average rainfall and flooding this season, including Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso and Ghana. It followed reports that a bomb had been left at his house. An anonymous caller contacted the MLA's Dunloy office claiming a device had been left at the family home which prompted police to carry out a search. Mr McKay said it was not the first time he had been threatened.
Heavy flooding in Niger over the past few weeks has killed up to 65 people and left 125,000 homeless. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The police have said nothing was found following a security alert at the home of Sinn Féin's North Antrim MLA Daithí McKay.
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Dozens more were injured when tents at Hammad, a remote desert area, were struck around noon (09:00 GMT). Most of the casualties were reportedly families of members of a rebel group known as the Eastern Lions, which is fighting so-called Islamic State (IS). There was no immediate comment from Russia, which backs Syria's government. However, a senior Western diplomat told the Reuters news agency that initial information suggested Russian aircraft carried out the raid. Last month, Russian jets twice attacked another Syrian rebel group's base in the border town of Tanf, to the north-east. Said Seif, a local activist, told the Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC) network that cluster munitions were used in Tuesday's air raid on the makeshift camp at Hammad. At least 15 people were killed and 40 others wounded, he said. Another activist, Ahmed al-Maslameh, put the death toll at eight, the Associated Press reported. A Jordanian source told the Reuters news agency that Jordanian army troops based on the border helped rush the injured to hospitals inside the kingdom. Mr Seif said almost 350 refugee families from eastern Syria, most of them relatives of rebel fighters, had been living at the camp, located inside the "no-man's-land" between the Syrian and Jordanian sides of the border. It is also close to the far larger refugee camp at Hadalat, where tens of thousands of Syrians have been stranded for months because the Jordanian authorities have been restricting the number permitted to enter on security grounds. The refugees at Hadalat and at the other major camp, to the north-east at Rukban, have been running out of food since Jordan declared the border a closed military zone following an IS suicide truck bomb attack on 21 June which killed six security personnel. On Tuesday, the United Nations said the Jordanian government had agreed to a one-off aid delivery for the 100,000 people thought to be at the two camps. "We have negotiated with the government for an intervention... to create packages that will include food as well as non-food items," the executive director of the UN's World Food Programme, Ertharin Cousin, told the AFP news agency. "But the Jordanian government has been very clear with us it is a one-time intervention," she added. Jordanian officials have asserted that the camps have become "enclaves" for IS militants and that "national security must take precedence". Real had goalkeeper Iker Casillas to thank for being level at the break after being outplayed. Gareth Bale's diving header was just wide after the break for the improved visitors before Ronaldo was denied a clear penalty. Ronaldo finally headed home before James Rodriguez curled in a second. The Portuguese's 300 Real goals have come in 288 games since joining from Manchester United for £80m in 2009. He is the third player after Raul (323) and Alfredo Di Stefano (307) to reach 300 goals for Real. His rivals needed 741 and 396 matches respectively to reach that mark. The 30-year-old scored five goals for the first time in Real's 9-1 hammering of Granada at the weekend but things were a lot nervier for the European champions on Wednesday night. Until Ronaldo headed home Dani Carvajal's right-wing cross, Real looked in serious danger of being upset by their battling city neighbours and falling seven points behind Barca. Ronaldo earlier had a blatant penalty appeal waved away after a clear foul by Antonio Amaya but he wasn't to be denied as he took his league tally for the season to 37 goals. Colombian Rodriguez gave the scoreline a flattering look with a cool curled finish late on as Real responded to Barcelona's earlier 4-0 win against Almeria.
At least eight people were killed when jets believed to be Russian bombed a Syrian refugee camp on the border with Jordan on Tuesday, activists say. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Cristiano Ronaldo scored his 300th competitive Real Madrid goal as they beat Rayo Vallecano to stay four points behind La Liga leaders Barcelona.
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The 25-year-old Blackwell will not fight again after sustaining serious head injuries in his middleweight fight against Chris Eubank Jr in March. Haye, 35, has pledged to donate 10% of the money from ticket sales for the bout at London's O2 Arena to Blackwell. "I had a good chat with him. He is in good spirits and sounds as sharp as a tack," said heavyweight Haye. The Londoner, who is fighting for the second time since a comeback from retirement, added: "I was worried about how Nick was going to be but he sounds better than ever. "It's really good knowing he's coming to the fight to do a bit of commentary. "I am not sure how much it will be but I've been aiming to get at least £50,000, that would be a nice lump to help him move on." Meanwhile, Haye has dismissed concerns from former undisputed world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis, who says his bigger physique hinders his speed. Haye said: "My speed feels as quick as ever, if not faster. If I was fighting Anthony Joshua, I would do the same training. "I'm stronger now than ever. I've done a nice solid strength programme in camp to maintain my weight. I am about 103kgs now. I was about 108kgs a month ago, and as I have sped up, my weight has just come down." In January, Haye fought for the first time in more than three years and knocked out Australian Mark de Mori in the first round. Gjergjaj, who was born in Kosovo but lives in Switzerland, has won all 29 of his professional contests, while Haye, a former cruiserweight and heavyweight world title holder, has lost two of his 29 fights.
Britain's David Haye hopes Saturday's fight with Arnold Gjergjaj will raise more than £50,000 for Nick Blackwell.
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Ernest Cox masterminded the recovery of 34 ships of the German fleet sunk by their crews in the waters of Scapa Flow at the end of WWI. Lauded by the media of the day, his work is now all but forgotten. Relatives unveiled a special plaque at Lyness, where the salvage operations were based, as a reminder. By 1924, the German fleet had lain submerged throughout the Royal Navy anchorage of Scapa Flow for five years and the accepted wisdom was that this was where they would remain. However Mr Cox was determined to raise as much of the valuable metal from the seabed as he could and bought the rights to salvage the fleet. He developed methods to help refloat the ships, many of which are still used in marine salvage to this day. Mr Cox bought a massive floating dry dock which he modified and fitted out with rows of winches. He also used compressed air to bring up vessels. The remaining wrecks today attract divers from around the world.
A ceremony has taken place in Orkney to commemorate what is regarded as one of the most remarkable feats of marine salvage ever achieved.
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12 June 2015 Last updated at 08:29 BST 17-year-old Tom Wagg found the planet while doing work experience at Keele University two years ago, but it has taken scientists since then to prove its existence. Observations were carried out in Chile in South America, and at the universities of Geneva and Liege in Europe. The planet does not have a name yet and a competition has been launched to find one. Watch Hayley's report to find out more about Tom's incredible discovery. Attacking midfielder Forestieri, 25, joined the Owls in a deal worth £3m from Watford in August after a potential move to Leeds fell through. "It wasn't easy to bring him in but he has quality and I'm very happy," Carvalhal told BBC Radio Sheffield. "He will become a very important player for us." Forestieri, who represented Italy at youth levels, helped Watford win promotion to the Premier League last season but did not feature in a top-flight game before his move to Hillsborough. The Owls are 15th in the Championship but Carvalhal believes Forestieri will boost his side's attacking threat. "Since the beginning of the season we have missed a player in the second line of midfield playing near the striker," added Carvalhal. "But Forestieri will give us more quality in attack because we now have a connection between midfield and attack." World celebrities gathered at a leafy promenade turned into a catwalk for the firm's Cruise collection, even though Chanel goods are not sold in Cuba. Ordinary Cubans were held behind police lines around the event venue, and many voiced their frustration. The show is the latest sign in Cuba's warming relations with the West. Earlier this week, a US cruise ship docked in Havana after sailing from Florida - the first such crossing in more than 50 years. Cuba and the US restored diplomatic relations last year. Celebrities - including actor Vin Diesel and supermodel Gisele Bundchen - attended the show at the Prado promenade to see Chanel's leading designer Karl Lagerfeld displaying the new collection. Lagerfeld said the line was inspired by Cuba's "cultural richness". But Havana residents could only watch from behind the security cordon lines as VIP guests arrived at the show in specially rented antique American sedans. "It's a shame they don't let us pass," aspiring local model Reinaldo Fonseca was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency. Chanel goods would cost well beyond the average Cuban wage of $25 (£17) a month, the BBC's Will Grant says. Media playback is not supported on this device At Euro 2016, there were violent clashes between Russian and English supporters in Marseille. A BBC documentary last month revealed trouble is planned for next year's World Cup. Russia will issue the cards which will be needed to enter the stadiums and can be used as a visa to enter the country. "What we can be sure of is that this will be a festival of football and there is no place in such festivals of football for those that are not here to support the sport or support the game," said Colin Smith, director of competitions for football's governing body Fifa, on a visit to the country on Thursday. Russia were fined and given a suspended disqualification by Uefa after their fans were involved in violence during Euro 2016. Fifa president Gianni Infantino says he is "not at all concerned" by the threat of hooliganism at next year's tournament. The Confederations Cup begins in June and will be played in four of the 11 World Cup host cities. It will feature eight teams, including the hosts and World Cup champions Germany. Officers said the incident involved two bare-chested men in the city's Tullideph Road at about 02:45 on Friday. A 23-year-old man required treatment in hospital as a result of the assault. The taxi driver, who was driving a blue wheelchair-accessible vehicle, alerted officers to the assault after stopping them in Blyth Place.
A schoolboy from England said he was "hugely excited" to have discovered a planet 1,000 light-years away. [NEXT_CONCEPT] New Sheffield Wednesday signing Fernando Forestieri will become a "very important" player for the club, boss Carlos Carvalhal has predicted. [NEXT_CONCEPT] French fashion house Chanel has staged its show in the Cuban capital Havana - the first international fashion show since the 1959 communist revolution. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Fans will need special identity cards to attend the 2018 World Cup and this summer's Confederation Cup in Russia in a move to combat football hooliganism. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Police are appealing for a taxi driver to come forward after he witnessed an assault in a Dundee street.
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In a statement, the lender said Ross McEwan did not want the allowance "to be a distraction from the task of building a great bank". The "role based" incentive is used by major banks to sidestep EU rules that limit bankers' bonuses. Mr McEwan's pay for 2015 is expected to top £2.7m - even after handing back the £1m share award. RBS, which is 80% owned by the UK government, will release its annual results on Thursday. In September, the bank reported a pre-tax profit of £3.9bn for the first nine months of 2014, and RBS shares have been recovering in recent weeks. However, the bank, which was bailed out at the height of the financial crisis, has undergone severe restructuring in recent years and has been plagued by a series of regulatory fines. Last year, Mr McEwan warned that RBS had a "long list of conduct and litigation issues to deal with" and said branch closures were "inevitable". On Wednesday, RBS said it had suspended another two employees as part of an investigation by the bank into foreign exchange market rigging. RBS was one of six banks fined a combined $4.3bn (£2.6bn) last month for failing to stop foreign exchange market manipulation. In February last year, the lender reported a pre-tax loss for 2013 of £8.2bn - its biggest annual loss since being rescued by the UK government. However RBS's shares, which fell to 326.6p after the 2013 results, have rebounded above 400p in recent days - moving closer to the the 500p average paid for them by the UK in 2008. The 35-year-old brought an end to his sporting career after Yorkshire Carnegie's Championship play-off defeat by Doncaster Knights. Sinfield had been signed on an 18-month deal with Carnegie but announced his retirement last month. "I'm really glad I did it. It was something that was on my bucket list," he told BBC Radio Leeds. "It was something I felt I needed to do and if I'd not took the challenge on I would have regretted it for the rest of my life. "I know I've only done six months instead of 18 but I just felt the timing was right and you don't want to push too far." Sinfield led the Rhinos to seven Grand Final wins during his 13 years as captain of the club and coach Brian McDermott has said he would welcome him back at the Super League club. But Sinfield, who made his professional debut at the age of 16, says he is looking forward to his retirement. "I can still keep myself fit and healthy because my body is intact and there's lots of challenges I'd like to do for charity," he added. "I want to find a line of work that makes me want to jump out of bed in the morning and it'll be nice to have my weekends free to spend time with my family. "I'll miss playing, I've no doubt about it, and I'll get behind both teams and hope they can have great success in the coming years." Have you added the new Top Story alerts in the BBC Sport app? Simply head to the menu in the app - and don't forget you can also add alerts for your rugby union team, cricket scores, football and more.
The chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is to forgo a share award worth £1m. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Leeds Rhinos legend Kevin Sinfield has said he would have regretted not testing himself in rugby union.
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Donald Trump Jr told Fox News the meeting was "just a nothing" but he should have handled it differently. He released emails showing he welcomed an offer to meet the lawyer, who was allegedly linked to the Kremlin and had material damaging to Hillary Clinton. US officials are investigating alleged Russian meddling in the US election. Since he was elected, President Trump has been dogged by allegations that Russia tried to sabotage Mrs Clinton's campaign. He has denied any knowledge of this and Russia has also repeatedly denied interfering. Asked by Fox News' Sean Hannity if he had told his father about last year's meeting, Mr Trump Jr said: "No. It was just a nothing. There was nothing to tell. "I mean, I wouldn't have even remembered it until you started scouring through this stuff. It was literally just a wasted 20 minutes, which was a shame." Donald Trump Jr, his brother-in-law Jared Kushner and campaign chairman Paul Manafort met Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya at Trump Tower in New York in June 2016. Trump Jr received an email from an intermediary, British publicist Rob Goldstone, promising documents from Russia that would incriminate Hillary Clinton. At that time, his father was the presumptive Republican nominee and heading towards an election fight against his Democratic rival, Mrs Clinton. One email from Mr Goldstone said the information they had been promised was "obviously very high-level and sensitive information but is part of Russia and its government's support for Mr Trump". The meeting took place, but Mr Trump Jr told Fox News the woman provided them with nothing of use and it only lasted 20 minutes. In retrospect, he would have done things a little differently, Donald Trump Jr told Fox News, but he defended his actions. "This is before the Russia mania, this is before they were building this up in the press. For me this was opposition research, they had something you know maybe concrete evidence to all the stories I'd been hearing about." But the meeting went nowhere, he said, and it was apparent Hillary Clinton wasn't what the meeting was about. He could not vouch for the information he was sent, he said. "Someone sent me an email. I can't help what someone sends me. I read it, I responded accordingly, and if there was something interesting there, I think that's pretty common." President Trump issued a brief statement in support of his son, describing him as "a high-quality person" and applauding his transparency. Mr Goldstone has previously denied any knowledge of involvement in the election by the Russian government. Ms Veselnitskaya has said she was never in possession of information that could have damaged Mrs Clinton, and has no links to the Kremlin. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said the emails were "very disturbing". The highest-ranked Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Adam Schiff, said he wanted Mr Trump Jr and all participants in the meeting to testify before the panel. There are several congressional committees looking into Russian interference and whether anyone on the Trump team helped, as well as a special counsel. Willett, 29, was 11-over-par for his 27 holes at Sawgrass in Florida. The 2016 Masters champion tweeted: "Not good to have to withdraw but swinging very poorly is putting a lot of unwanted strain on the back." Willett, who has a history of back injuries, has missed four cuts in nine tournaments this season. He began his second round at the Players with a bogey on the 10th but got that stroke back on the next hole and recorded four successive pars before a dropped shot at 16 was followed by a triple-bogey six on the infamous 17th. He made par on the 18th - his ninth hole of the day - to go out in 40 strokes and appear destined to miss the cut. The Sheffield-born player's poor form - including becoming the first defending champion to miss the cut at the Masters since Mike Weir in 2004 - has resulted in his world ranking dropping to 21st. He also split with friend and long-time caddie Jonathan Smart after a disagreement during April's RBC Heritage event. Willett's next scheduled start is the PGA Championship, the key event on the European Tour schedule, in two weeks' time.
US President Donald Trump's son has said he did not tell his father about a meeting with a Russian lawyer who said she could help his election campaign. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Danny Willett pulled out of the Players Championship midway through his second round because of a back injury, saying his "body and mind need a rest".
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The Campaign for Borders Rail said the "resounding success" of the route showed the huge demand for services. It said it appreciated the area had "many and varied transport needs". However, the group said those should be considered separately from the case to extend the railway south beyond its current Tweedbank terminus. The CBR said the demand for services was a clear indication of the potential to capitalise on that success which could only be achieved by taking the line south to "benefit a larger catchment area". It said consideration of roads improvements should be a separate exercise and should not be allowed to affect plans to examine the feasibility of extending the track. The group said it welcomed confirmation that significantly more people had used the Borders Railway in its first year of operation than was initially expected. The CBR said it was also looking forward to the results of a study into the potential for railway development in the Borders. "The return of trains is incredibly popular in the Scottish Borders," said CBR chairman Allan McLean. "The line has boosted the economies of the Borders and Midlothian. This proves that people were right to argue for so long in favour of railway services. "The time has now come to enhance the existing route to match the level of demand and to prepare for the extension of tracks to serve more communities by train." The Scottish government has already given a commitment to a feasibility study to look at the possibility of extending the line. It will examine the case for an extension of the railway - along with improvements to the A1, A7, and A68 - with a report expected by the end of next year. Media playback is not supported on this device Bristol Rovers were taken over by the Jordanian Al Qadi family in February, and within three months the club had won promotion to League One. BBC Inside Out West reporter Andy Howard has been to the Middle East to find out more about the investment bankers, and shares his experiences of his visit. Bordered by Syria, Iraq and Israel, it hardly sounded like the ideal location for a short stay. "You'll be surprised," said the voice on the other end of the phone. That voice belonged to Wael Al Qadi. It was a couple of weeks after the amazing scenes of jubilation at the Memorial Stadium on 7 May. The dust had just about settled on an incredible end to the season. It was clear to me that we had to find out more about the new Bristol Rovers owner and, indeed, his homeland. So, despite the geography, we arranged to do just that. Why? Because it is very unusual to see a man from the Middle East kissing an English football club's badge and clapping the home terrace. It is even more unusual to watch a club president on the shoulders of fans heading towards the local pub. But these are unusual times at Bristol Rovers. I suppose Jordan looks like you would expect - a contrast of sprawling, pale, low-rise cities, and mile upon mile of barren desert. But it functions like an island of relative peace, in an area dogged by war. It is also very clear that football, especially English football, is big news. I mentioned low-rise buildings, but on the first day I visited one of the tallest and newest in all of Amman - the Arab Jordanian Investment Bank, a multi-million pound, purpose-built skyscraper for one of the region's biggest businesses. There, I met the Al Qadi brothers - Hani, Samer and Wael, and their father Abdulkader - who set up the business from scratch more than 30 years ago. They were all welcoming, warm, and interested in what a BBC reporter from 3,000 miles away wanted to find out. The older brothers and father admitted they had needed massive convincing to buy Bristol Rovers, but that they can now see what Wael was going on about. "It was the best day of my life," said Samer, describing the 2-1 win against Dagenham which secure promotion, when he watched the second half in the Blackthorn End. "It was crazy, I can tell you." Over the course of the week I met: He certainly seems to be enjoying the ride, so far. The full BBC Inside Out documentary airs on Monday, September 12, on BBC One West at 7.30pm and will also be available on the BBC iPlayer.
A campaign group has said extending the new rail line linking Edinburgh and the Borders should be a transport priority for the region. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Jordan's position on the map made for interesting reading.
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Cardinal Raymond Burke is a staunch critic of Pope Francis' moves to soften the Church's stance on homosexuality. He said that he was to be moved to the far less senior post of patron of the sovereign military order of Malta. Pope Francis is leading a council in the Vatican on possible reforms to Church teaching on social issues. A preliminary report on the initial discussions at the extraordinary Synod on the family was released on Monday. The report, which was written by more than 200 bishops, said homosexuals had "gifts and qualities to offer", and used more welcoming language when discussing homosexuality and its place in the Church. Although it does not challenge the Church's stance on gay marriage, the document was praised by liberal clergymen and activists. However, it was also criticised by more traditional and conservative Church figures who rejected it. Cardinal Burke was among the most publicly critical of the bishops involved in the discussions. For weeks, there had been rumours that the Pope would demote him, says the BBC's James Reynolds in Rome. Last year, a survey launched by Pope Francis suggested that the majority of Catholics rejected Church teaching on issues such as sex and contraception.
A leading American cardinal has told BuzzFeed that he is to be demoted from his position running the Catholic Church justice system.
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Some residents of Harmondsworth, Hillingdon could have their properties compulsorily purchased for demolition. In retaliation they targeted the director of corporate responsibility's house by laying a giant plastic runway across his drive. Matt Gorman said he was "not happy" about the incident and said his family's privacy had been invaded. The protestor's stunt came after the Airports Commission backed a third runway at Heathrow which is being considered by the government. The group also targeted the property of the airport's chief executive John Holland-Kaye. Veronica Rumsey, who has lived in her house for 43 years said the action was to show "we were here first". Her neighbour, Neil Keveren, said they were living without "peace of mind" and he would fight for his property. He said: "I'm not leaving it and that is all there is to it. If it takes more direct action there will be more direct action." In July Mr Keveren was fined £600 for blocking the tunnel which leads to Heathrow Airport terminals 1, 2 and 3, but he said "people need to know that we are going to go the whole hog". Heathrow Airport said it had created a plan which had the local community "at its core" and included a compensation package of more than £1bn for noise insulation and compulsory purchases. In a statement it said: "The protestors are a small minority...Heathrow expansion will create 40,000 new jobs in London and up to 180,000 jobs and £211bn of economic growth across the country." John Stewart the chair of the main anti-Heathrow expansion group Hacan said: "This just shows how angry people are. "The fact that ordinary residents are willing to go to these lengths is a signal of just how difficult it will be for the airport and any government to build a third runway at Heathrow." BBC Inside Out London is on BBC One in the London region on Monday 14 September at 19:30 BST, nationwide on the BBC News Channel at 20:30 and on the BBC iPlayer for 28 days thereafter. Mr Whyte stood accused in November last year of plotting a fraudulent takeover of the Ibrox club in 2011. Four other men - David Whitehouse, Paul Clark, David Grier and Gary Withey - also faced charges at that time. All five were granted bail. The Crown Office were required to serve an indictment against the men by 17 September. This would be the next step in getting any case to trial. But, during a special two day hearing at Glasgow Sheriff Court, the prosecution requested more time to do this. Sheriff Sean Murphy QC agreed to a three-month extension following several hours of legal talks. When he appeared in November, Mr Whyte made no plea or declaration to a charge of being involved in a two-year fraudulent scheme and a second allegation under the Companies Act. Mr Whyte bought the club from Sir David Murray for £1 in 2011. Rangers subsequently went into administration in February 2012. The fraud charge Mr Whyte faces span from January 2010 to February 2012. The four other men were also charged with being involved in a fraudulent scheme. Mr Withey also faced an allegation under the Companies Act. Mr Grier, Mr Whitehouse and Mr Clark faced an allegation of attempt to pervert the course of justice. The three were employees of Duff & Phelps, the company which carried out the administration of Rangers. Mr Withey worked for Mr Whyte's London law firm Collyer Bristow before he took on a post with Rangers. The four made no plea during the hearing last year and were bailed pending a future court date. Officials have told US media that an airman shot his commander in an apparent murder-suicide. Police responded to reports of a shooting at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland around 09:00 local time (15:00 BST), a spokesman said. Two bodies were found in a room at the base, and authorities believe the gunman is one of the dead. The Bexar County Sheriff's Office said they continued to search the buildings after finding the people who were killed. "There are no indications that this was a terrorist attack," an Air Force statement said. Joint Base San-Antonio Lackland is the military's largest joint base, where airmen do basic training.
Home-owners in west London whose properties lie in the path of a proposed third runway for Heathrow have taken their fight to the people in charge. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Prosecutors have been given an extra three months to bring former Rangers owner Craig Whyte to trial. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A shooting at a US Air Force base in Texas has left at least two people dead, police say.
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He defeated incumbent Dr Alasdair McDonnell in a vote at the party's annual conference in Armagh by 172 votes to 133. Mr Eastwood became the joint-youngest ever person to lead one of Stormont's five main parties. The 32-year-old went from councillor in Derry to party leader in just 10 years. However, he now faces an even bigger challenge - to unite and grow the party to challenge Sinn Féin. Mr Eastwood joined the SDLP in 1998, citing the Good Friday Agreement and leadership of John Hume as the inspiration. In 2005, he was elected to Derry City Council and five years later, aged 27, became Derry's youngest ever mayor. It was not long before Mr Eastwood moved from the mayor's office to Stormont - he was elected as an MLA for Foyle in 2011. His rising reputation had not gone unnoticed and four months after the election he was nominated to stand as the SDLP's deputy party leader. However, citing a desire to focus on constituency issues, Mr Eastwood turned the nomination down. Four years later, and with more experience as an MLA, he announced his intention to stand against Dr McDonnell. He said that the challenge was "not personal" against the current leader, but that politics needed "a new generation". "I'm fed up losing," he told supporters when he launched his bid for the leadership last September. Despite his confident pitch for leadership, the past four years at Stormont have not been free of controversy. He faced criticism in 2012 for his decision to carry the coffin of a friend, who was buried in a paramilitary-style funeral. Mr Eastwood said he acted in a personal capacity in carrying the coffin of Seamus Coyle and again defended his position when questioned on the day before the leadership election. Following the assembly elections in May 2016, Mr Eastwood led the SDLP into opposition at Stormont alongside the UUP.
Colum Eastwood became leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) in November 2015,
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The gunman, who had kidnapped a woman, barricaded himself inside the bureau before fleeing by car. He was shot in the head by police but survived. A second officer was shot in the leg during the stand-off about a mile (1.6km) from the US Capitol. The incident was not related to terrorism, the FBI said. Police said the security guard, Lawrence Buckner, saw two people fighting in a car that matched the description of a vehicle involved in an armed kidnapping. When Mr Buckner - whose age was not given - approached the car he was shot in the chest. The gunman also fired at police cars during a chase before he was blocked in and wounded in a fire fight. The woman, thought to be the suspect's wife, got out of the car somewhere between the Census Bureau office in Maryland and central Washington. She was later found alive. Police said the officer who was shot in the leg is expected to recover. The cyber-attack caused havoc for businesses around the globe, but mainly in Ukraine. The potential solution only works if the ransomware secured administration privileges to the machine. However Positive Technologies said the concept is currently too technical for most average computer users to run. "Once you have a proof of concept of how data can be decrypted, the information security community can take this knowledge and develop automatic tools, or simplify the methodology of getting the encryption reversed," said the firm's Dan Tara. The company says in a blog that the creators of the ransomware made mistakes in programming the encryption algorithm Salsa 20 that was used with administration rights. Mr Tara said his team had not expected to get this result when it started investigating the outbreak. "Recovering data from a hard drive with this method requires applying heuristics, and may take several hours," said Head of Reverse Engineering Dmitry Sklyarov. "The completeness of data recovery depends on many factors (disk size, free space, and fragmentation) and may be able to reach 100% for large disks that contain many standard files, such as OS [Operating Systems] and application components that are identical on many machines and have known values." It is impossible to work out how many victims would have had their administration privileges taken over. Without this, the ransomware carries out a different method of encryption which is only reversible with a private key obtainable from the criminals behind it. However the email address that was provided was initially shut down meaning that they were not contactable by victims who chose to try to pay. The research team's finding only works on the recent Petya ransomware and its variants. "It doesn't look like a working solution yet but it gives cause for hope," said security expert Prof Alan Woodward, from the University of Surrey. Salsa20, which activates when the ransomware has admin privileges, corrupts a device's Master File Table (MFT), meaning that files are lost forever. "What they seem to have discovered is that there's a portion of the MFT that isn't corrupted and they are suggesting they may have found a way of recovering that," Prof Woodward added. "If that is true, that would be a significant finding. It may actually allow people to recover the so-called boot disks, that contain the original operating system, which we were assuming you couldn't do." Earlier this week the perpetrators of the attack appeared to have accessed the ransom payments they raised and made fresh demands. Consumer goods giant Reckitt Benckiser, which makes Nurofen painkillers, Dettol cleaner and Durex condoms, said the attack may have cost it £110m because of lost production and delivery time, the Financial Times reported.
A security guard at Washington DC's Census Bureau shot after approaching a car in which two people were arguing has died in hospital. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A security firm says it has managed to decrypt files damaged by the recent Petya ransomware attack, on one infected computer.
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The company has just shipped its 22nd navigation payload, and the last under its current work contract. Essentially the "brains" of a sat-nav spacecraft, this payload is already in the hands of consortium partner, OHB of Bremen, Germany, which will complete final assembly and testing. Galileo is expected to begin public services by the end of this year. Twelve satellites are already in orbit transmitting timing and location data. A further two are set to launch on a Soyuz rocket on 24 May. Another four are scheduled to go up on an Ariane rocket before 2016 is out. Every payload for these spacecraft has been prepared in Britain. This has involved integrating a pan-European supply of components, including the all-important Swiss atomic clocks that drive Galileo's signals. "The UK is the centre of competence for navigation payloads," said Dr John Paffett, the director of telecommunications and navigation at SSTL. "In fact, if you think about the performance we are now seeing on the first Galileo satellites then I would argue that the UK can also be regarded as the world centre of competence in these payloads." The European Commission has said that the full satellite constellation (with spares) should comprise 30 platforms, meaning Brussels will soon have to award another spacecraft manufacturing contract if it wants to keep the project on track. It goes without saying that SSTL, which is based in Guildford, will be bidding for the work. Europe's Galileo system under construction A project of the European Commission and the European Space Agency 30 satellites are to be launched in batches of two and four at a time Galileo will work alongside the US-based GPS and the Russian Glonass systems Full system promises real-time positioning down to a metre or less It should deepen and extend high-value markets already initiated by GPS The EC, because it lacks the necessary technical expertise, has engaged the European Space Agency to manage the procurement of the Galileo satellites and their ground control infrastructure. In a video message to an SSTL celebration event on Thursday, Paul Verhoef, Esa's new navigation director, congratulated the company on its performance, but then warned it not to be complacent in the upcoming bidding process. "In the last competition - if you remember well - the then incumbent thought they had it all cashed in, and they thought it was just an issue of going through the motions. But they hadn't calculated on the determination of yourselves and OHB. Don't fall into the same trap! Do your best to try go win it." Mr Verhoef was referencing a consortium of Europe's two biggest space companies - Airbus (previously Astrium) and Thales Alenia Space - who had done the early development on Galileo but then missed out on the contract to build the operational satellite system. Lord Willetts, a former Conservative science minister, is now a non-executive director at SSTL. He said the company would do all it could to hang on to the business: "This paints a picture of what our country is capable of doing. "I think many people on the continent regard Britain as a services economy. They don't think we still make things, and they don't appreciate that we can make very hi-tech things - like the satellites made here in Guildford, and elsewhere in places like Stevenage and Portsmouth [by Airbus]. "We can take pride in the fact that we still make very smart bits of kit." The EC is investing billions in its "rival" to America's Global Positioning System (GPS), believing it will bring significant returns to member-state economies in the form of new businesses that can exploit precise timing and location data delivered from orbit. Galileo's next-generation technologies are designed to provide users with quicker, more reliable fixes, enabling them to locate their positions with an error of one metre, compared with the current GPS error of several metres. GPS already underpins a great swathe of activity with many uses that are unseen and unsung, such as the timing signal's widespread role in synchronising telecommunications systems and major financial transactions. Ahead of Galileo's service start later this year, mobile phone and other device manufacturers have been incorporating chips that can process the signals.
UK satellite manufacturer SSTL has reached a key milestone in its work on Galileo, the EU's version of GPS.