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Give a brief overview of this passage. | Media reports claim Catt told Cipriani that he would "end his England career" hours after the Sale back had learned that he was not in the 31-man squad.
"There are two sides to every story. Everyone knows Mike Catt pretty well," said Lancaster.
"It's a non-story for me."
The Rugby Football Union has admitted that "a robust conversation" took place between the pair, but denied that other players stepped in to defend Cipriani.
Cipriani wrote in the Sun newspaper that he has "a good working relationship" with Catt after the pair spoke the day after the incident, and Lancaster praised the 27-year-old's maturity.
"Danny was excellent, everyone shook hands and it was all done in a short time and we all moved on," he added.
Catt and Cipriani have clashed before.
The 44-year-old coach, who won the World Cup with England as a player in 2003, said in 2009 that he understood why Cipriani's Wasps team-mate Josh Lewsey had punched an "arrogant" Cipriani in their own training-ground confrontation.
Steve Diamond, Cipriani's coach at Sale, believes that England's early exit shows the decision to pick Owen Farrell and George Ford as the only specialist fly-halves in the 31-man squad was a mistake.
"Danny does not need to prove anything to us or his peers. The England coaches are a bit different. That is their decision, rightly or wrongly, and it has proven wrong.
"They pick the best team to get success. He didn't get picked and they did not get success so he will probably feel vindicated."
With England eliminated after defeats by Wales and Australia, Sam Burgess, who has been left out of Saturday's final Pool A game against Uruguay, has played his final match of the tournament.
Lancaster said that he was open to the possibility of moving the league convert from centre to flanker after his Bath coach Mike Ford insisted the 26-year-old would stay at the club and focus on winning his place in the England squad as a blind-side flanker
"Bath used him quite creatively - off six and five-man line-outs stood in the centres as a ball carrier," added Lancaster.
"The more he plays the game, the more I'm sure that they will educate him in the whys and wherefores of lifting and jumping.
"From my point of view, I will have to sit back and see how it unfolds."
The deal with the Welsh government will see the removal of some "unnecessary" bureaucracy, and is part of a plan to reform primary care services.
Changes over the next two years could see a requirement for surgeries to offer more GP appointments and repeat prescription services online.
A GPs' committee said it would offer practices greater financial stability.
The Welsh government said the new arrangements for 2015-16 and 2016-17 would strengthen the primary care cluster arrangements in Wales.
Dr Charlotte Jones, chair of the General Practitioners Committee Wales, said: "The practice will be able to share the services that they provide.
"They will be able to support each other if certain practices are having difficulties, which we know is happening across Wales."
She said there would be more collaboration with community nurses and pharmacists to help deliver more care in the community.
Health Minister Mark Drakeford said: "The two-year agreement reached with GPC Wales directly addresses GPs' concerns about unnecessary bureaucracy.
"This places more trust and reliance on the professionalism of GPs to use their clinical judgement and will allow GPs to spend more time caring for the most vulnerable people with complex care needs, in particular, the frail and elderly. | England head coach Stuart Lancaster says there are "two sides" to the pre-World Cup training ground row between fly-half Danny Cipriani and attack coach Mike Catt.
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GPs are to have more time to focus on caring for the most vulnerable patients under a new contract. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | The Parliamentary and Health Ombudsman found the hospital trust and Lambeth Council had failed to share information about "Mr C"'s next-of-kin in time for them to attend his funeral.
The Ombudsman said this had caused Mr C's sister "shock and distress".
The council and trust have apologised, paying out £650 for distress caused.
The Ombudsman found "a series of errors" were made by the trust and the council, including the council's loss of an envelope containing documents relating to Mr C's financial affairs, letters between him and his family, and the key to his property.
The envelope was found behind a cabinet at council premises after Mr C's sister, Mrs B, independently learned of her brother's death through his GP and contacted the trust.
The Ombudsman concluded these oversights denied his family the chance to go to the funeral.
Following the Ombudsman's investigation, the trust and council apologised to Mrs B and paid her £650 in recognition of the distress caused and for the loss of opportunity to attend her brother's funeral.
She received a further £374 to cover the two months when bills were unnecessarily paid by his estate.
Details of the case were made public as part of a wider report on complaints about the NHS.
Parliamentary and Health Ombudsman Julie Mellor said: "We are seeing far too many cases where grieving families are not being given answers when they complain to the NHS, forcing them to endure more anguish and distress."
The report contains basic details of 40 case studies among the 544 investigations of unresolved complaints the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman finished investigating in April and May 2015.
A Lambeth Council spokesman said Mr C's case involved "a very unfortunate set of circumstances" and the council had since reviewed its processes "to ensure such a situation could not be repeated".
A spokeswoman for King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said it had also reviewed its practices.
The spokeswoman added: "We would like to apologise wholeheartedly once again to the family involved in this case." | A man who died in King's College Hospital was cremated without his family being informed of his death after Lambeth Council lost his records. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The 26-year-old was sent off for a challenge on Neil Danns in the 2-2 draw with Bolton Wanderers last Saturday.
Murphy will now miss matches against Cardiff, Leeds and Bristol City.
"I find it hard to understand. He slipped, there was no obvious intent and no strong contact," Seagulls boss Chris Hughton told BBC Sussex.
"I was confident we would get the decision we felt would be the right one.
"It seems incredibly harsh for a lad who has never been sent off before. There was nothing malicious."
Murphy was shown a straight red card by referee Mark Haywood and Hughton said after the match he felt the official was influenced by Danns's reaction to the tackle.
"It was deemed as dangerous play," the 56-year-old added.
"I understand there can be an element of the referee seeing the incident at full speed, and that he might make a certain decision.
"There is a difference between a player slipping and dangerous or malicious play.
"We are going to be missing a player for three games who has been very good for us. We feel for him." | Brighton forward Jamie Murphy will be banned for three games after the Football Association rejected Albion's appeal. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | The incident happened in Dobsons Way in Bessbrook on Friday morning.
The victim was taken to hospital for treatment but later died from his injuries.
Police are appealing for any witnesses to contact officers in Newry by calling 101, quoting reference number 399 of 11/08/17.
Campaign group UK Uncut said hundreds had protested in town and cities such as London, Manchester and Northampton.
It said plans aimed at saving £220m from the criminal legal aid bill in England and Wales would "block access to justice for millions of people".
The Ministry of Justice says legal aid costs too much and can not be "immune" to efficiency commitments.
Proposals for possible savings include stopping defendants with a disposable income of more than £37,500 from automatically receiving legal aid, and curbing prisoners' right to legal aid.
Legal aid costs taxpayers about £2bn every year, with criminal defence making up more than half of the expenditure.
The government says the situation is unsustainable and wants to see fewer, bigger organisations providing legal aid as part of a streamlined system.
However, the Bar Council has argued this would result in the end of the long-standing right of a defendant to choose a legal aid solicitor, saying people would effectively be allocated a representative on the basis of cost.
Some groups have also expressed fears that the changes could deny justice to the poorest in society.
UK Uncut said protests had taken place in London, Manchester, Hull, Liverpool, Northampton, Cambridge and Norwich on Saturday.
In London, demonstrators gathered on the Strand at about 12:00 BST to set up a roadblock.
Many protesters sat on the road and others put their bicycles in the way of traffic.
The area was reopened around two hours later when the demonstration was contained in a smaller area.
Protesters also held a mock trial for Justice Secretary Chris Grayling, and attached a banner to the fence of the court building which warned: "No justice, no peace."
The Metropolitan Police did not comment when asked about the number of protesters.
But the City of London Police said it had warned the group they were stopping the emergency services from travelling around the capital.
UK Uncut said roadblocks had also been set up in Manchester, Northampton and Cambridge.
Spokesman David Conway said: "The government's plans will block access to justice for millions of people.
"We're blocking roads to make a stand against that and to make it clear how strongly people around the country oppose these outrageous plans.
"People will have to represent themselves in court and get compensation much later than they should."
An MoJ spokesman said: "We have one of the best legal professions in the world, but cannot close our eyes to the fact that - at around £2bn - legal aid is costing too much."
He said the government's planned reforms would create a sustainable legal aid system that would "still be one of the most generous in the world".
The spokesman added: "At a time when major financial challenges are being felt by businesses and households across the country, the legal sector cannot be immune from the government's commitment to getting better value for every penny of taxpayers' money we spend."
Plans to remove the right for defendants in criminal cases in England and Wales to choose their solicitor under the legal aid system were scrapped in July.
The government had planned to put the onus on lawyers competing for contracts, but has said it now recognises that choice is seen as "fundamental". | A young boy has died after being knocked down by a car in County Armagh, police have said.
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Demonstrators have staged events across England in opposition to planned changes to legal aid. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | England's Haseeb Hameed, playing in his first ever limited-overs match, struck nine fours in his 88 off 101 balls as Lancashire posted 314-8 in 50 overs.
James Sykes' 4-57, his best one-day figures, included the wicket of Hameed.
After a rain delay and a middle-order wobble, the visitors got home by three wickets with four balls to spare.
Mark Pettini (59), Cameron Delport (62) and Mark Cosgrove (67) set the foundations but, after an over had been lost to rain, Leicestershire then lost three quick wickets to slip to 244-6.
However, Tom Wells, Rob Sayer and Zak Chappell each chipped in with valuable runs to see Leicestershire to victory in their first group match.
One positive for the beaten hosts was the display of Hameed, who has appeared in 29 first-class matches for Lancashire, England Lions and England, but had never before featured in a limited-overs match at senior level.
Lancashire batsman Haseeb Hameed told BBC Radio Manchester:
"The rain helped the wicket out in the second innings. The ball skidded on, and it was slightly nicer to bat on I'd say. We probably got the wrong end of the conditions, but that's how it works.
"We felt our bowlers would come into play with the skills they have. But those skills weren't as beneficial as they would have been had the wicket stayed as it was.
"It was my first one-day game in a long time, and it was nice to get out there and experience that at this level. I've got a lot of learning to take away."
Leicestershire head coach Pierre de Bruyn told BBC Radio Leicester:
"This is what we're about. Coming to Old Trafford against a good side, we held our nerve in pressure situations.
"Our spinners bowled together and it worked for us. The wicket was very dry. We had a very young bowling attack, and they really stood up.
"Perhaps the last two overs in their innings when we dropped three catches cost us 20 runs, but I'm very proud of this young bowling attack." | Leicestershire successfully chased a revised target of 309 in 49 overs to beat Lancashire in the two sides' One-Day Cup group opener at Old Trafford. |
Can you summarize the following information? | The two-time world champion had hoped to be challenging at the front this term, but he qualified 13th for the season-opening Australian Grand Prix.
That followed a pre-season in which the team's Honda engine was both unreliable and uncompetitive.
"I expect a big change in the team, a big reaction," the Spaniard, 35, said.
"We will not be 13th all season, or I will not be."
He said the weekend was progress after a tough winter, but added: "It's not enough.
"We are McLaren-Honda. If we are not in the top five, on the podium, the rest is losing time."
McLaren have had two difficult seasons since the start of their relationship with Honda in 2015, but the partnership expected a big step forward this year after finishing sixth in the constructors' championship last season.
However the engine had to be changed several times in pre-season testing.
It has run more reliably in Australia this weekend but it still has a vibration problem that needs managing and is affecting performance, and a significant overall shortfall to the other engines.
Honda F1 boss Yusuke Hasegawa said: "After the winter test we are having strong pressure from the team and the driver, but we try to keep improving.
"We didn't do a great job. So we need to do that.
"I cannot guarantee when we will get more power but as soon as possible we try to introduce a new specification for that."
McLaren have approached Mercedes about using their engines in the future despite having a multi-year contract with Honda, as previously revealed by BBC Sport.
McLaren racing director Eric Boullier said: "I am not going to comment on these kind of discussions. It is a private discussion we have with Honda to recover, considering all options.
"We are responsible for McLaren and Hasegawa is responsible for Honda. As partners we try to help each other and support each other because the key secret is to be as integrated as possible."
The rules will also establish minimum standards of cybersecurity for banks, energy and water firms.
It is the first time Europe has created EU-wide rules on cybersecurity.
It comes in the wake of concerns that key infrastructure, such as airports or power stations, could be targeted by hackers.
The proposed laws - agreed by MEPs and ministers from the 28 EU countries - will also apply to some tech firms. The details of this have yet to be worked out but the rules are likely to include online marketplaces, such as eBay and Amazon, and search engines such as Google.
The Network and Information Security directive is an attempt to deal with the emerging threat of cyber-attacks.
Currently there is no common approach in Europe to digital network breaches, whether they are the result of human error, technical failures or malicious attacks.
The European Agency for Network and Information Security (Enisa) estimates that such breaches result in annual losses in the range of 260 billion to 340 billion euros.
Under the new rules, member states would have to co-operate more on cybersecurity, exchanging information about breaches, offering best practice and assisting member states in securing their infrastructures.
"Today, a milestone has been achieved: we have agreed on the first ever EU-wide cybersecurity rules, which the Parliament has advocated for years," said German MEP Andreas Schwab, after the deal was agreed.
Digital affairs commissioner Guenther Oettinger added that it was a "major step in raising the level of cybersecurity in Europe".
MEP Vicky Ford, who chaired the final round of talks, said that it was "a hugely complex piece of legislation".
"We have set up a network which will enable experts from each of the 28 countries in the EU to share and develop best practice in network security, whilst not compromising any individual member state's own national security measures."
The deal still needs approval from the European Parliament and national governments. The vote is expected to take place in the spring, after which member states would have around two years to put the measures in place. | Fernando Alonso has made it clear he expects a quick response from his McLaren-Honda team after their poor start to the season.
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Technology firms and those running critical services will have to report cyber-breaches, under new rules proposed by MEPs. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Claire Sugden said the review would look at the "legislative framework" for certain categories of crime and other issues, such as unduly lenient sentences.
The minister said sentencing did not just affect the offender, but victims, families and the wider community.
Ms Sugden said recommendations would be put out to consultation.
She said sentencing played a "major part" in how the criminal justice system as a whole was perceived and "impacts on public confidence in the delivery of justice".
"I am aware of concerns that have been expressed from time to time about sentencing in some individual cases," she said.
"While such cases represent a very small part of the everyday work of the courts, they can have a significant impact on public perception and confidence in the justice system and the sentencing process.
"That is why I have decided that a comprehensive review of sentencing policy is needed."
The review will consider the following areas:
The minister stressed it was not a review of sentencing decisions, as in each individual case it was a matter for the judiciary and the courts.
"It is essential that their independence is maintained," she added.
"However, it is my responsibility to ensure the effectiveness of the legislative framework within which individual sentencing decisions are made, and, along with the Lord Chief Justice's programme of action, to seek to ensure that there is confidence in how those decisions are reached." | The justice minister has announced a major review of sentencing in Northern Ireland. |
Please summarize the passage below. | He offered his "profound respect" and "eternal condolences" for US soldiers who died in the conflict.
Mr Abe is on a state visit to the US to discuss a wide-ranging trans-Pacific trade deal.
He and US President Barack Obama have also agreed on new guidelines for defence co-operation.
But his speech to the joint session of Congress was scrutinised for comments on Japan's aggression in World War Two. This year marks the 70th anniversary of the end of the conflict.
Mr Abe said he had visited the World War Two memorial in Washington and reflected upon the 400,000 American troops who died with "deep repentance in my heart".
"My dear friends, on behalf of Japan and the Japanese people, I offer with profound respect my eternal condolences to the souls of all American people that were lost during World War Two,'' he said, to warm applause.
Mr Abe also acknowledged that Japan had "brought suffering to the peoples in Asian countries", adding: "We must not avert our eyes from that."
However, correspondents say he stopped short of offering his own apology for Japan's conduct during the war, which included the sexual enslavement of tens of thousands of Asian women by Japanese troops.
In the audience was Lee Yong-soo, one of thousands of Korean women forced into Japanese military brothels during the war.
She was invited to Congress by Democratic Representative Mike Honda, a strong critic of Mr Abe.
Mr Abe was the first Japanese Prime Minister to address a joint session of the US Congress.
He also urged lawmakers to support the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), "for the sake of our children and our children's children"
The TPP is aimed at liberalising markets in 12 countries and the US and Japan are among the biggest players.
Mr Abe said the deal was about spreading shared values of rule of law, democracy and freedom.
He added: "It is also about our security. Long-term, its strategic value is awesome. We should never forget that.
"Let us bring the TPP to a successful conclusion through our joint leadership." | Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has expressed "deep repentance" over Japan's role in World War Two, during an historic address to the US Congress. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | China has been accused of unfair practices by firms overseas for dumping products at low prices in their home markets.
In April, China promised to reduce its steel output, following a crisis meeting attended by 30 nations.
The President met Premier Li Keqiang on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
In a statement from The White House, President Obama also urged China to establish a level playing field, so that all firms can compete fairly in the country.
Earlier this year, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China accused China of not doing enough to address the issue of overcapacity.
European Chamber President Joerg Wuttke said: "Although the Party's annual Central Economic Work Conference has listed addressing overcapacity as a priority every year from 2007 to 2015, fundamental changes have not yet taken place.
"Tackling overcapacity is now more urgent than ever: the cost of maintaining the status quo is far too high."
63.7bn
tonnes in 2015
67.5% used in 2015
70.9% used in 2014 | US President Barack Obama has urged China to accelerate measures to tackle overproduction of industrial goods. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | It is understood the Barclays board has approved the appointment of Mr Staley and that a formal announcement will be made in the next fortnight.
Barclays' previous chief executive, Antony Jenkins, was fired from the bank in July after falling out with board members.
Mr Staley currently works for US hedge fund Blue Mountain Capital Management.
BBC business editor Kamal Ahmed told the Today programme that previously "there had been big tensions within the bank" between the retail and investment divisions.
He added that investors were unhappy with the change of focus of the bank towards retail banking under Mr Jenkins.
The board of Barclays has agreed the appointment of Mr Staley and the bank is now waiting for regulatory approval before making an official announcement.
Our editor added that with the troubles faced by the banking sector, including the taxpayer-funded bailout of Royal Bank of Scotland, some people within the City are concerned that London is losing its position as global banking centre. The appointment of Mr Staley might be seen as trying to resurrect that position.
Shares in Barclays were 2.8% lower at 249.20p in mid-morning trade following the news.
James Staley, 59, is a former chief executive of JP Morgan Chase's investment bank. He spent more than 30 years of his career there before joining hedge fund BlueMountain Capital Management in 2013.
A longstanding lieutenant of JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon, Mr Staley was at one point thought to be in line to take over as chief executive of the US bank.
It appears that it is not the first time that Mr Staley has been lined up to take the chief executive role at Barclays, following the resignation of Bob Diamond in the wake of the Libor rate-rigging scandal.
Three years ago, US business news broadcaster CNBC reported Mr Staley was, in fact, a finalist for the top job at the bank in August 2012, - alongside his colleague Bill Winters. Both eventually lost out to insider Antony Jenkins.
In 2015, Mr Staley was elected to the board of Swiss bank UBS to serve on the bank's risk committee.
Underscoring the bank's renewed focus on investment banking, at the weekend Barclays' executive chairman John McFarlane was reported as saying European investment banks should consider merging to create a regional champion to compete with US rivals, highlighting the anxieties of senior bankers in Europe about their sector's future.
"If you did want to create an investment banking champion for Europe, you would have to combine the investment banking arms of the main players, but you would have to swallow really hard and you would need political support," Mr McFarlane told the Financial Times.
In July, Barclays bank reported a 25% rise in statutory pre-tax profits to £3.1bn for the six months to the end of June. During the period, the bank also set aside £850m to compensate customers - including cover for further claims for mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI).
Those close to the process of hiring James Staley insist he is no "Bob Diamond Mark II" and that the investment bank will still have to find savings.
The pre-2008 era is definitely over, my sources say.
Mr Staley's job will be to smooth relations between the two arms of the bank.
I am told he will retain the strategy mapped out by Mr McFarlane: cut costs by simplifying the bank's structure, re-invigorate the investment bank and jettison underperforming businesses.
At a time when most European banks are withdrawing from the investment banking sector, Barclays sees an opportunity - expanding trans-Atlantic global banking and its African operations.
It will be Mr Staley's job to realise it.
Read Kamal's blog here. | Barclays is set to appoint former JP Morgan banker James "Jes" Staley as its new chief executive. |
Summarize the passage below. | Ministers will let local authorities bring forward council tax rises, and money cut from a housing scheme will be spent on social care instead.
The government said it would create a "sustainable" system for everyone who needs social care.
But the Local Government Association said the measures "fall well short".
LGA chairman Lord Porter said an "urgent injection of genuinely new additional government funding" was needed.
He said the council tax change would help some areas in the short-term but not be "anywhere near enough" to relieve pressure on the sector, adding that it would "add an extra financial burden on already struggling households".
He said changes to the New Homes Bonus, which rewards councils for building new homes, were "not new money but a redistribution of funding already promised to councils".
Communities Secretary Sajid Javid unveiled the measures as he set out the local government finance settlement in the Commons.
He said the settlement, which governs how councils in England will be funded, "recognises the cost of delivering adult social care and makes more funding available sooner".
Mr Javid told MPs the two measures would mean £900m extra for local authorities over the next two years to fund social care services.
But the cash was described as "a drop in the ocean" by the Care and Support Alliance of charities, while the president of the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives said: "Simply robbing Peter to pay Paul will not tackle a systemic funding problem."
You stay in your own home while getting help with everyday tasks such as washing, dressing and eating.
average amount of care provided per week, by your council
average paid per hour by your council, 2014-15
average paid per hour in your region if you pay for your own care, 2016
You live in a care home that provides round-the-clock support with everyday tasks.
TBC pay for their own care
You live in a care home which provides round-the-clock support for everyday tasks and nursing care. Depending on your medical needs, the NHS may contribute to your costs.
TBC pay for their own care
Savings, investments and income are assessed, along with the value of your home - unless you or a close relative live there.
On Wednesday, it emerged the government would offer councils an increase in the extra council tax they can impose to cover social care costs.
This was confirmed by Mr Javid, who said local authorities would be permitted to increase council tax by up to 6% over two years, ringfenced for social care, with a maximum of 3% each year.
The 6% previously had to be spread over three years. A 1% increase would raise an estimated £200m, although the effect would vary across the country.
In total, about £19.7bn will be spent on social care in England this year.
Mr Javid added that more money was "not the only answer", saying some councils needed to work harder to reduce delays in discharging people from hospital beds caused by a lack of available social care.
Responding to Mr Javid, shadow communities and local government minister Gareth Thomas said the local government settlement would "leave people paying high taxes for worse public services".
He urged the government to reconsider a planned corporation tax cut in order to plug the social care funding gap.
Conservative MP Sarah Wollaston, who chairs the Commons Health Select Committee, welcomed the government measures but said they did not go far enough to address the increase in demand, urging ministers to start cross-party talks "urgently".
Former health minister and Lib Dem MP Norman Lamb, who has been calling for more investment in adult social care, described Mr Javid's statement as "feeble".
But the government says it is investing in social care through its Better Care Fund, as well as taking steps to more closely integrate health and social care provision.
Council tax accounts for only about half of local authority income - the rest coming from central grants, which are being cut, and business rates, which are volatile - so it is unclear by how much care budgets will rise.
The numbers of elderly people going without care, paying for it themselves or relying on family and friends currently outstrip those getting council help by four to one.
The head of the NHS in England has suggested free bus passes and pension benefits for older people may have to be reconsidered to address the problems facing social care.
Appearing before MPs on Thursday, Simon Stevens said a sweeping new "social contract" was needed setting out the "full range of services and needs that people have in retirement", predicated on the right for people to receive care in their homes.
"There is no point in saying to our parents 'yes you've got a free bus pass if you're not able to leave the house because you don't have the availability of a home help," he said. | Councils say it is "hugely disappointing" that the government has not given them extra money to tackle shortfalls in social care funding. |
Can you summarize this content? | Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said nationals from those countries would now be unlikely to be granted asylum.
The move is part of new measures aimed at tightening rules in a country which last year received more than 1.1 million asylum seekers.
Earlier, 26 migrants drowned off a Greek island after their boat capsized.
The migrants died near the island of Samos, near Turkey. Ten of the victims were children.
In other developments:
Migrant crisis: Who does the EU send back?
Mr Gabriel's comments came after his Social Democrats held talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats and their Bavaria-based sister party, the Christian Social Union.
"The mood is good," Mr Gabriel was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.
Morocco has already responded to the proposal, saying it would repatriate any of its nationals who had arrived illegally in Germany.
The German coalition partners also agreed that migrants with restricted asylum status would be unable to bring relatives into the country for two years.
The deportation of failed asylum seekers would also be speeded up.
The migrant issue has been straining the coalition, with the CSU threatening to take Mrs Merkel's government to court if the party's demand to stem the flow of asylum seekers is not dealt with decisively.
The coalition proposals still need to be approved by the government and parliament.
A draft Wales Bill offering more powers to Wales is to be published on Tuesday.
Mr Crabb claimed some politicians were looking for "a great big scrap" ahead of the 2016 assembly election.
Labour AM Mick Antoniw said his party may oppose a bill which did not give "constitutional clarity" on power-sharing between Wales and Westminster.
The UK government is proposing a "reserved powers" model where powers are assumed to be devolved unless they are listed as Westminster responsibilities.
The Welsh government is in favour of the principle but First Minister Carwyn Jones has claimed the current proposals could "restrict the powers of the people of Wales".
Mr Crabb denied this, promising the assembly's additional powers over energy, transport, and "to call itself a Parliament and to be a Parliament if it wants".
"In what sense can anyone possible argue that this is actually reducing the powers of the Welsh government and the Welsh Assembly? That charge simply carries no weight whatsoever," he told Sunday Politics Wales.
The Welsh secretary also rejected a call by the first minister to delay the bill in order to "get this right rather than rush it".
"What we're not going to do is suddenly pause the whole thing because it suits the political interests of some of those in Cardiff Bay, who basically want to have a great big scrap over this in the run up to the Welsh elections in May," he said.
Mr Antoniw told the programme he had fundamental concerns whether the bill would provide "constitutional clarity" and may not be "fit for purpose".
"We might end up having to oppose an inadequate bill if that situation was to arise," he said.
The draft Wales Bill will be open to consultation before a final version is due to be presented in February.
Sunday Politics Wales is on BBC One Wales on Sunday, 18 October, at 11:00 BST. | Germany has unveiled plans to add Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia to its list of safe countries, as it tries to curb growing numbers of migrants.
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Welsh Secretary Stephen Crabb has denied new plans for devolution will weaken the assembly's powers and has refused to delay the process. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | Eleven hundred sites were surveyed with 15% having "widespread" litter.
Worst affected areas were industrial estates with more than a third failing to meet the standard.
Areas of low density housing did best with virtually all rated clean or very clean and some totally free of litter.
Between them the 11 councils spent more than £43m on cleansing, according to the survey for Keep Northern Ireland beautiful.
Spokesman Chris Allen said it was clear councils were "struggling to keep pace with people's irresponsible habits".
He said the average cost to every ratepayer in Northern Ireland was £58 a year.
There was some good news on dog fouling with the reported incidence falling.
The survey data was collected between August and October 2016.
One hundred areas in each council district were surveyed. They included main roads; rural roads; high density housing; low density housing; recreational areas and industrial estates.
It emerged last year that although the cost of dealing with littering was going up, the number of enforcement cases was going down.
In 2016 it stood at 3,724, down from 4,435 in 2014/15.
Seven of the 11 councils have signed up to the Live Here Love Here anti-litter initiative.
Businesses and government departments also support several clean up campaigns. | One in seven of Northern Ireland streets and parks failed to meet the accepted standard for litter last year, despite tens of millions of pounds being spent by councils on clean-ups. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Tesla had a 50% rise in orders compared with the same period last year.
However higher costs hurt profits. Tesla's profits were $231m (£149m) in the period between July and September compared with $251m in 2014.
The company also announced it would release its Model 3 car, a mass market vehicle, at the end of March 2016.
The company expects to sell the Model 3 for $35,000.
Tesla opened two new stores in China this quarter and said it planned to open more as sales in the country grow.
Telsa reported it delivered 11,603 vehicles in the third quarter, slightly more than 11,580 it expected.
Shares of the company were up 7.5% in after-hours trading.
Angel Rangel will return to training next week and could yet play again this season after missing two months with a broken foot.
Everton's Morgan Schneiderlin will miss a second match with a thigh injury but is expected to return to face Watford.
James McCarthy is nearing fitness after a hamstring problem but remains out.
Steve Wilson: "Swansea City have never won a home league game against Everton - and there's never been a better time to start.
"Paul Clement has done an extremely good job to give a dispirited squad some hope after the - in football terms - catastrophic spell under Bob Bradley.
"However, you still feel that they might need to squeeze every last point from their remaining games against Everton, Sunderland and West Brom.
"It might just be a good time to play Everton, whose primary target of qualifying for Europe has been achieved and for whom a top-four place is no longer realistically attainable.
"Their season has been one of great promise, and with more money in the bank and a new stadium on the architects' drawing board, it's no wonder Ronald Koeman wants to stick around."
Twitter:@Wilsonfooty
Swansea City head coach Paul Clement: "We know that if we manage to survive this year it will be a remarkable achievement. It has not been done often.
"Anything worthwhile you have to work hard for. You have to go through an ordeal with all the pressure, and we certainly will have done that."
Everton manager Ronald Koeman on speculation linking him to Barcelona: "There's no chance that I will leave Everton before the end of my contract.
"I don't see me being the next manager (of Barcelona).
"I mentioned several times it's human ambition - for players, for managers. That doesn't change my position or contract with Everton.
"I'm really happy, I'm looking forward to next season."
Chelsea's 3-0 win at Goodison Park flattered them a little bit, but Everton still looked a bit flat to me.
Swansea, in contrast, are fighting for their lives.
Prediction: 2-1
Lawro's full predictions v indie rock band Kasabian
Head-to-head
Swansea City
Everton
SAM (Sports Analytics Machine) is a super-computer created by @ProfIanMcHale at the University of Salford that is used to predict the outcome of football matches.
Pauline Chai, 70, of Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, claims their assets are worth at least £205m and wants half.
Dr Khoo, 78, a non-executive chairman of Laura Ashley Holdings, will argue she should receive about £9m.
The Family Division of the High Court in London is hearing the case after the breakdown of their 42-year marriage.
The former beauty queen told the judge that she and Dr Khoo had made a sharing agreement and that he had always said "what's mine is yours".
She said: "I looked at marriage in the traditional way.
"He is the breadwinner and I stayed at home and looked after the children. It was a daunting task.
"He was in business and I didn't really get into business. I did my job looking after the house and the family and the children."
Dr Khoo, who is based in Malaysia, and Ms Chai have five grown-up children together.
A barrister representing Ms Chai, who was Miss Malaysia 1969, told the court that Dr Khoo would argue that he had made a special contribution to generating wealth because of his "business genius".
But Mr Todd said Ms Chai had made an equal contribution by shouldering the domestic burden.
The hearing is expected to last several weeks. | Tesla, the maker of electric cars, saw a rise in orders during the third quarter helped by sales of the company's new Model X SUV.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Swansea's top scorer Fernando Llorente has overcome a stomach bug, but a hamstring injury looks likely to have curtailed Jefferson Montero's season.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The former wife of Laura Ashley boss Khoo Kay Peng has told a court she made an equal contribution to their wealth by being a "traditional" wife. |
Summarize the content provided below. | He was born Tarkhan Batirashvili and grew up in Georgia's picturesque Pankisi Gorge. He lived in the village of Birkiani, where his father, a Christian, still lives in a small, simply-furnished house.
The jihad in Syria and Iraq was not Shishani's first experience with combat. He previously served with the Georgian army during the war with Russia in 2008.
But when he became ill and was dismissed from the army, things started to go wrong, Teimuraz Batirashvili says.
He found it hard to get work and was arrested after a raid on his house.
"One night a terrible noise woke me up - someone was banging at the door. It was the police. There was a bench next to the door near the stairs. I used to go past it every day," Mr Batirashvili recalls.
"A policeman called me over and took a box full of ammunition out from under it. He asked me: 'What's this?' and I told him: 'I don't know. It wasn't here before.'"
Shishani was reportedly accused of storing the ammunition.
But it was when he was sent to prison that Shishani really changed, his father says, adding that he left for Syria after being released early under an amnesty.
"He said to me: 'Father, no-one needs me here,'" Mr Batirashvili recalls.
Before Shishani left he removed all family photos in the house, in accordance with his strict new beliefs.
"I didn't notice it, but one day when I wanted to look at an album I realised there was nothing left," Mr Batirashvili says.
He says his middle son was also radicalised and has also left the country.
"I have three sons and they all became Muslim. I'm a Christian, I go to church.
"Neither my father nor my grandfather were Muslim. We've all prayed in these sacred places. And these three are Muslim radical preachers," Mr Batirashvili says.
The Pankisi Gorge had been an area of suspected militant activity.
Mr Batirashvili says poverty was a factor in Shishani's radicalisation.
"When you're desperate you'll do anything. Now he says he left because of his faith, but I knew he did it because we were poor," he says.
However, he admitted that Shishani's motivations would have changed over time. "Now, yes, money isn't the reason he's leading this war."
Now, Mr Batirashvili gets by on his pension with the help of the odd contribution from his eldest son Tengiz, who is still in the village.
He has had only one phone call from Shishani since he left.
Shishani told him he had a Chechen wife. "He said: 'I have a daughter and she looks like you, her name is Sophia.'"
Shishani asked his father if he was still praying. Mr Batirashvili says that when he replied that he was still a practising Christian, his son hung up the phone and never called again.
Among the more religious people of the gorge, Shishani has attracted respect for his actions in Syria, and some locals say that more men from the area have gone to follow his example.
Mr Batirashvili laments his family's new-found notoriety. "What need do I have for this sort of fame? I wish [Shishani] had never left. But maybe that was his fate, to go to war in Syria," he says.
Brooks played scientist Dr Rudy Wells in the 1970s TV series, as well as roles in The Bionic Woman and Dallas.
Jon Landau, a film producer and friend of Brooks, said he died of natural causes in Los Angeles.
"Marty was the eternal optimist. He only looked at the good things in life," said Landau, the producer of Titanic and Avatar.
Brooks' other credits included The Philco Television Playhouse in the 1950s, Combat! in the 1960s and Knots Landing in the 1990s.
He also played Dr Arthur Bradshaw on the ABC daytime serial General Hospital.
Landau said Brooks was proud of his stage work that included An Enemy of the People and I Am a Camera. | Omar al-Shishani may now be one of the most feared jihadists in the Middle East, as a commander in the al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis), but his early life was very different.
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Actor Martin E Brooks, who starred in The Six Million Dollar Man, has died at the age of 90. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | It said such policies offer "poor value for money".
"Firms must start putting consumers first, and stop seeing them as pound signs," said Christopher Woolard, director of policy at the FCA.
The insurance industry rejected the accusations, calling some of them unhelpful.
Add-on insurance is where a policy is sold alongside another product.
For example, customers buying a mobile phone, or a holiday, are often offered insurance at the same time.
Nearly 3,000 consumers have complained about such policies in the past nine months.
The FCA found that a quarter of customers buying them were unaware that they could get similar products elsewhere.
And more than half of such customers did not compare the different policies available.
The FCA judged add-on policies by their "claims ratio".
This measures the proportion of the initial cost of a product that is eventually paid out under the policy.
In the case of add-on personal accident insurance it found that the claims ratio was just 9%.
In the case of Guaranteed Asset Protection (GAP) policies - often sold with cars - it found that just 10% of the full value was returned to claimants.
In comparison, regular household or motor insurance policies paid out 64% of the original purchase price.
As a result, the FCA said many consumers may be paying for policies which are poor value.
But the industry said the claims ratio was not a good way of measuring performance.
"The emphasis upon claims ratios is unhelpful; they are not an accurate benchmark of customer value, not least because they are affected by distribution costs for the insurer," said Hugh Savill, the director of regulation at the Association of British Insurers.
The FCA is now proposing a number of changes, to protect consumers. These include:
The FCA is now consulting on the proposals, and will accept comments up until 8 April, 2014. | The insurance regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), has promised to crack down on so-called "add-on" policies. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | The 21-year-old has signed a five-year contract after passing a medical.
He scored 33 goals in 58 games for Posh last season and had attracted interest from Premier League clubs.
The deal eclipses the £4.5m Forest paid for Pierre van Hooijdonk in 1997, two months after director of football Barry Fry said Assombalonga was not for sale.
The former Watford striker, who was born in what is now DR Congo, had spells on loan with Braintree and Southend, before Posh paid a club-record fee of £1.5m to bring him to London Road in July 2013.
He finished as League One's joint-top scorer, as the club reached the end-of-season play-offs and won the Football League Trophy. | Nottingham Forest have completed the signing of Peterborough United striker Britt Assombalonga for a club-record fee of about £5.5m. |
Can you summarize the given article? | The landslip in the eastern Indian state of Manipur buried a whole village, Indian media reported.
In neighbouring Myanmar, four western regions have been declared disaster zones after heavy floods left at least 27 people dead.
Incessant rain over several weeks has led to flooding and landslides in most of the country (also known as Burma).
Wind and rain from Cyclone Komen added to damage in recent days.
Elsewhere:
The landslide in Manipur state hit a remote village in Chandel district, bordering Myanmar, early on Saturday.
Rescue teams were not expected to get there until Sunday because of heavy rains and landslides, a local MP said.
Continuous rain in recent days has washed away bridges and roads and left thousands homeless, Indian NDTV reported.
In Myanmar, Mg Mg Khin, the director of disaster management with the national Red Cross, told the BBC the country was facing "a big disaster" and that there was a risk of more rain over the coming weeks.
The Red Cross was waiting for information on the extent of damage to refugee camps in Rakhine, he added.
Rakhine, along with Chin, Magwe and Sagaing, has been declared a disaster zone.
The UN said 140,000 people in Rakhine are living in camps near the region's capital, Sittwe. Most are Rohingya Muslims.
Thousands of people are sheltering in monasteries, but one report said people from the Rohingya Muslim minority were turned away from some shelters.
The Burma Times said security forces turned away Rohingya Muslims from abandoned schools and community centres in the western Rakhine state.
More than half a million acres of rice paddy fields have been flooded, the Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation said.
On Saturday, the UN said it was to send emergency teams to assess the need for food, drinking water and shelter.
"This is much, much worse than normal," Toe Zaw Latt, the Myanmar bureau chief for the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) network, told the BBC from Yangon.
On Friday, Ko Myo Zaw Lin, a journalist with DVB, was filmed carrying out a live interview in flood waters up to his chest in the southern city of Bago. | At least 20 people have been killed in a landslide as monsoon rains continue to batter parts of South-East Asia. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Amos was replaced after just 48 minutes of his tournament debut against Italy.
"It was frustrating, I'm not going to lie, I would have liked to have a full 80 and a good run," admitted Amos.
"But it's always nice to make my debut and I'm only 21 so I've got time on my side."
Amos was one of four wings used by Wales in the 2016 Six Nations alongside ever-present George North, Tom James and Alex Cuthbert.
Blues wing Cuthbert has been ruled out of the summer matches against England and New Zealand after having surgery on a knee injury.
And Amos has been in prolific form since returning to his region, scoring two tries in each of the Dragons' Pro12 games against Edinburgh and Ospreys.
However, he is cautious about the value of his regional form in the competition for back-three places in Warren Gatland's team.
"There's a certain Leigh Halfpenny coming back for the summer tour and he's one of the best players in the world so he'll come straight back into the jersey," he said.
"I can keep pushing for my place, get on the summer tour and hopefully test myself against the world's best.
"In Welsh rugby things can change in a matter of days, there's so many players playing well.
"There's so much competition you can't count your chickens before the squad's announced."
Dragons director of rugby Lyn Jones labelled Amos' performance against the Ospreys as "his best game for us" while Ospreys backs coach Gruff Rees said his finishing was "world-class."
Amos' eye for the line will be one of the Dragons' main assets as they head to Gloucester for a European Challenge Cup quarter-final, with both teams on a losing run.
"I prefer it when we play an expansive game, we can create things when we play with a bit of width.
"I hope we can go to Gloucester, not go into our shells and give the fans something good to watch.
Media playback is not supported on this device
"I've never played there but a lot of the boys who went to my school (Monmouth) were from the Gloucester and Forest of Dean area and are big Gloucester fans- so they'll be hoping I muck up!
"The rivalry will add a bit of spice."
Medical student Amos, who is trying to follow the example of Jamie Roberts in qualifying as a doctor while playing professional rugby, is hoping to be free of his studies during the summer Tests.
"I was talking to (Ospreys flanker) Sam Underhill about this, he's at university as well and he's swamped with exams," he added.
"But we do three exams in the third year, you have to pass two and luckily I've already passed two so I'm in a fairly comfortable position at the moment." | Newport Gwent Dragons wing Hallam Amos says he will have to "keep pushing" for a place on the summer tour of New Zealand after the frustration of his Six Nations experience. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | Five people are still missing and more than 30 were injured in the TGV crash near the eastern city of Strasbourg.
Investigators are trying to determine who the children are and why they were on board when access was meant to be restricted to technicians.
It is not clear whether children were among the dead.
"That's not a practice that the SNCF recognises," said company chief Guillaume Pepy. "A test train is a test train".
SNCF said it was possible that railway workers' children were on board when the train crashed, reportedly at around 350km/h (217mph).
Excessive speed has been blamed for the crash, the first fatal accident since TGV trains began operating in 1981.
The train ended up partially submerged in a canal under a bridge. | Several children were on board when a high-speed train derailed during a test run in France, killing 11 people, the rail company SNCF has said. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Outspoken and influential, this former London head teacher, who will be succeeded by Amanda Spielman, often set the agenda more than education secretaries.
He was always ready to speak his mind - and it meant some fierce criticism.
"Was it tough? Yes, it was very tough," he says, looking back at the highs and lows of his time in office.
1. Most important change: Scrapping 'satisfactory'
In what was a highly contested move, Sir Michael scrapped the "satisfactory" grade and replaced it with "requires improvement".
"Satisfactory" was no longer satisfactory and schools were given a deadline to improve - and Sir Michael said this was a really significant statement of intent.
"That enormously challenged the system to do better. I remember the furore it created - head teachers' associations were up in arms, there was letter after letter, they'd never been under so much pressure, did I know what I was doing?
"I stuck to my guns and no-one now would want to go back."
2. Toughest time: Being briefed against during Michael Gove's time as education secretary
In January 2014, he made front page news as he went on the attack against what he thought were attempts to discredit Ofsted.
"I didn't mind having a robust argument with people in the Department [for Education] about Ofsted, but I wasn't going to be briefed against," by what he called "nasty and unprofessional" people.
"I made that clear to Michael [Gove] himself - and I just was not going to have that, leaking to the press what they thought about Ofsted. I just wasn't going to have it.
"I was extremely angry. That first year at Ofsted was incredibly pressurised."
"Sources close to Mr Gove" rejected any involvement.
This bruising experience turned out to be something of a new lease of life, he says.
It established very publicly that Ofsted was independent and that its chief inspector "wasn't going to be mucked about".
"If we're going to make a difference we've got to be independent. We've got to be left alone.
"If he had confidence in me, he should have left me alone to do the job properly. I wasn't going to have briefings making my life even more difficult."
3. Best education secretary: Michael Gove
"Despite the fact that I clashed with Michael Gove, he was on the right track. He thought deeply about it. He brought energy and vitality."
Even though Mr Gove was unpopular with teachers, Sir Michael says that in the long-term he will be seen as a success.
"They might not have liked him, but they will remember him. History will say he was a very transformative and radical secretary of state."
Sir Michael also commends David Blunkett and Estelle Morris.
4. Biggest policy flop: Education action zones
Introduced after Labour's landslide victory in 1997, these were a high-profile attempt to breathe innovation and new life into the most deprived areas.
But Sir Michael says the reality was "layer upon layer of bureaucracy" and endless meetings of different agencies, while skirting round the real problems.
His current worry is that expanding grammars will "fragment" the school system.
5. The knighthood? 'I thought it was a prank'
Back in 1999, it was still very unusual for school leaders to get knighthoods.
"When the letter came through the door I was shocked
"I thought someone was playing a prank on me. I held up the letter to the light to see if it was a forgery of some sort. And then when I got into school I phoned up No 10."
They confirmed it was real and he was among the first waves of education knighthoods.
6. Most annoying: 'How long have you got?'
Juvenile think-tankers, fresh from university with lots of plans and no experience of putting things into practice are not going to be top of the Wilshaw Christmas card list.
They contribute to policies that are "confused and ill-thought through".
He is also not keen on the style of TV adverts for teaching.
"We sell teaching so badly, those soppy adverts with teachers messing about with test tubes."
7: Politicians - good or bad for education?
"Without political will nothing much happens," he says.
"Standards are infinitely better than in the 70s, 80s and 90s - and that's partly because of the interest of prime ministers and very powerful secretaries of state for education."
He commends Tony Blair for recognising "that if we wanted a better society and a stronger economy, we needed a stronger education system".
But the downside is political grandstanding.
"What teachers get fed up about are politicians coming in and wanting to stamp their authority by issuing idiotic circulars which make little or no difference.
"Too much change is as bad as not enough."
8. 'Anti-school culture'
Sir Michael has warned of white working class youngsters failing in school.
And on his "unfinished business" list would be "big pockets of underachievement" in secondary schools in the north of England.
But he has a tough message for communities with an "anti-school culture".
If there is going to be a big investment in schools and staffing, he says parents have to play their part.
"You'd better turn up to the parents' evening, you'd better make sure your kids do their homework, you'd better support the school by making sure they wear the uniform.
"We need to be much tougher on those communities - I would fine parents."
9. Name-calling
Sir Michael has attracted the wrath of teachers over the years.
A particular highlight of the name-calling, he says, was being told he was "the most despised man in education".
But such run-ins made him "battle-hardened" and he says school leaders need to be tough and ready to lead from the front.
10. And finally
As he retires, it's the status of teaching and its capacity to change lives that still seems most important.
His heroes were inspirational head teachers - whose influence "ran through the school like a stick of rock".
"Teaching is such an honourable profession." | When Sir Michael Wilshaw steps down this week as head of Ofsted, it will see the departure of English education's most dominant figure. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Gerry Adams made the comments at Sinn Féin's National United Ireland conference at the Waterfront Hall, Belfast, on Saturday.
He said it was important to "embrace" positive aspects of shared history.
It comes as talks to restore devolution continue at Stormont.
Mr Adams told the conference that recent election results at the assembly and Westminster showed a "deep political schism" in Northern Ireland.
He said: "Instead of concentrating on the negative aspects of our four centuries of shared history, I suggest that we embrace the areas of agreement and of co-operation; of good neighbourliness and the common good.
"Rarely have we lived through so much change in such a short space of time.
He added: "Our task must be to ensure that it is a shared future which looks after every citizen, and in which everyone accepts the right of the other to be Irish or British - to be unionist or nationalist or republican."
Mr Adams also said that the economic case for unification "will not on its own win some unionists over".
He therefore called for groups, including the Orange Order, to engage with Sinn Féin for further discussions.
"We need to address the future role of the Orange, its place in an agreed Ireland. Of course, that is a challenge also for the Orange and I invite their leaders once again to meet with Sinn Féin," he said.
"It is unacceptable for the Orange to refuse to meet at leadership level with our leadership.
"I have met with Orangemen as have other republicans.
"These have been useful and necessary engagements. They need to be built upon." | Sinn Féin's leader called for nationalists and republicans to adopt a new approach to "unlock unionist opposition to a new Ireland". |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | The three broke out of a maximum-security prison almost two weeks ago.
President Mauricio Macri's office initially said they had been captured north-west of Buenos Aires, but police later said two remained at large.
The latest twist is a major embarrassment to the new president, correspondents say.
The police manhunt - shown on live television - has gripped the country.
Police say the man they captured, Martin Lanatta, was caught after the car the men were travelling in rolled over in the chase in Santa Fe province, about 500km (300 miles) from the capital.
The other two escaped on foot.
Victor Schillaci and brothers Cristian and Martin Lanatta were serving life in prison for kidnapping and murdering three men allegedly connected to a drug trafficking ring.
President Macri - a conservative who replaced Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner after elections in December - had accused the previous administration of not doing enough to crack down on drug crime.
Last month the men escaped from one of the country's most secure prisons using a fake gun to threaten one of the guards.
Martin Lanatta, had leapt into the political limelight last year when he accused the presidential chief of staff, Anibal Fernandez, of complicity in the killings.
Mr Fernandez denied the accusation but it damaged his campaign last October to become the new governor of Buenos Aires province.
The candidate who won, Maria Eugenia Vidal, dismissed the intrigue and said the jail-break had been an inside job.
She sacked the head of the prison service.
Sammy, 32, who is currently playing in the World T20 in India, has previously played for Nottinghamshire and Glamorgan in the competition.
The St Lucian will be available for the south coast county from 2 June until his Caribbean Premier League commitments at the start of July.
"I'm really excited to have signed with Hampshire," Sammy said.
"Hampshire have had strong T20 results in the past which I'm hoping will continue this coming summer.
"They also have a rich West Indian history which I'm looking forward to adding to the best I can."
The illness has forced the 56-year-old Japanese actor to delay his return to the Broadway musical The King and I in order to have treatment.
The Oscar-nominated actor has had endoscopic surgery and is recuperating in a hospital in Japan, his agent said.
Watanabe made his US stage debut last year in the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic and was to return in March.
He won critical acclaim for his 2015 performance, with the New York Times for example, saying Watanabe played his role "with the convincing exasperation of a majesty under siege".
His run in the show, opposite actress Kelli O'Hara, ended in July and Watanabe became the first Japanese actor to be nominated for a Tony Award.
In a statement, he said: "I would like to ask for your understanding that the start of my performance in New York will be a little delayed."
Watanabe, who has previously battled leukaemia, was diagnosed "almost miraculously early" with stomach cancer last month and underwent surgery, he said.
"I was really shocked, my wife and daughter pushed me to have a health check and the cancer was found. It was a very early stage and they operated immediately," he added.
Watanabe was nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor for 2003's The Last Samurai, in which he co-starred with Tom Cruise.
He has also featured in Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins and Inception, the 2014 reboot of Godzilla and was a voice actor for the fourth instalment of the Transformers franchise, Transformers: Age of Extinction.
Watanabe hails from the Niigata region of north-west Japan. He went straight into acting after leaving school and became known in his home country for his samurai roles.
The actor was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia in 1989 but resumed acting while still undergoing chemotherapy. He became ill again in the early 1990s and, following further treatment, has been in remission since. | A huge manhunt in Argentina netted only one of three fugitives convicted of a triple murder, officials said hours after claiming all had been caught.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
West Indies limited-overs captain Darren Sammy will join Hampshire for a large proportion of the T20 Blast.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Last Samurai star Ken Watanabe has revealed he is suffering from stomach cancer. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team found the party high in Observatory Gully and walked them down to a spot from where they could be airlifted from the hill.
A coastguard helicopter made the airlift.
Fort William-based Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team said the climbers were well equipped but had to endure a "very wet" night on the mountain.
None of the group were thought to have been hurt during their ordeal. | Four climbers have spent a night on Ben Nevis after getting into difficulty descending the peak. |
Summarize this article briefly. | She told delegates every community in the country should be able to own their own clean energy power station.
During his leadership campaign, Jeremy Corbyn said he personally favoured bringing the big six energy suppliers into public ownership.
But Ms Nandy said giving people direct control was a "far more radical" idea.
In her first speech since being given the role earlier this month, the shadow energy and climate change secretary said de-carbonising the UK's economy was "one of the biggest challenges that the country has ever faced".
She accused the government of "turning its back on our wind and solar industries" and "trashing" the UK's legacy for international engagement on climate change.
Outlining her thinking on the future shape of the energy market, she said local communities should be given the opportunity to set up their power plant or take over existing renewable facilities as a way of creating a market in cheaper, cleaner energy.
"I want to put people back in charge," she said. "Jeremy and I don't want to nationalise energy.
"We want to do something far more radical than that. We want to democratise it.
"There should be nothing to stop every community in this country owning its own clean energy power station."
She cited the example of Nottingham Council, which she said had created its own energy company to "cut bills and go green". Labour, she said, would back other "trailblazing" local initiatives that wanted to follow suit, arguing that community-owned energy co-operatives could become "powerhouses" in their own right.
"We will work with our local government leaders to push for a clean energy boom in our great cities."
She added: "Because our city and county regions can lead the world. They can point the way towards a safer, brighter, more secure future. To be the light on the hill for all of us who care about the cost of our energy - to our family budgets, our businesses and our environment.
"Let's not wait for this government. Because let's face it, we'd be waiting forever. Let's seize the initiative and put power into our own hands."
Mr Corbyn's team has been studying the more decentralised model of energy supply in Germany, where a number of suppliers are owned by local authorities, communities and small businesses and individual towns and cities have taken over their local electricity grids.
Labour has backed, in principle, the building of new nuclear reactors but has questioned the cost of the proposed new plant at Hinkley Point and the amount of public subsidy required to get it off the ground.
Ms Nandy said the project was set to cost more than the 2012 Olympics, Crossrail and Heathrow's Terminal 5 combined at a time when the government was pledging to bring energy bills down. | Labour wants to "democratise rather than nationalise" the UK's energy market, its new spokeswoman Lisa Nandy has told the party conference. |
Summarize the content provided below. | The global watchdog's director-general, Yukiya Amano, said it would require €9.2m ($10.6m; £6.7m) per year.
The extra funding the IAEA had received for its current Iran operations would run out next month, he warned.
Iran has agreed to limit its sensitive nuclear activities in return for an end to crippling international sanctions.
The US says the deal will prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Iran stresses that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes only.
Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) agreed on 14 July, inspectors from the IAEA will continuously monitor Iran's declared nuclear sites and also verify that no fissile material is moved covertly to a secret location for a bomb.
Iran has also agreed to allow inspectors to access any site they deem suspicious.
On Tuesday, Mr Amano told a meeting of the IAEA's board of governors in Vienna that it currently received €800,000 ($916,000; £582,000) per month to monitor Iranian nuclear activities.
So far, the costs have been met through extra-budgetary contributions from member states, but that money will be exhausted by the end of September.
Mr Amano said the agency would require an additional €160,000 per month in the run-up to the implementation of the JCPOA, and would then need €9.2m per year for the duration of the 15-year deal.
Following the appeal, the US said it was "committed to working with all member states to ensure the agency has the resources it needs to verify Iran's nuclear-related commitments".
Mr Amano also told Tuesday's meeting that the "road-map" agreement the IAEA signed with Iran alongside the JCPOA to resolve concerns about the possible military dimensions of its nuclear programme was technically sound and did not compromise the agency's standards.
The IAEA has been criticised for disclosing the details of the road-map. | The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has asked member states for more money to supervise last month's nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers. |
Please summarize the following text. | The Accies manager has added centre-half Xavier Tomas and goalkeeper Ryan Fulton to his squad this summer.
But he is looking for two forwards.
"The guys you know can make a difference, every other team wants them and the boys think they can play at a higher level for much bigger clubs," said Canning.
"At this stage, for clubs of our size, it's not easy to get in the guys you want to get in.
"So you've got to be patient, keep working at it.
"A lot of the players you know can make a difference think they can play in the English Championship or English Premier League and, rightly so, want to play at the highest level they can.
"Probably towards the end of the transfer window, it starts to get to the point where they realise that's not going to happen for them and have to broaden their search."
Accies were the last club in the Scottish Premiership to make a signing this summer and it was not until the day before the season kicked off against East Kilbride in the League Cup that Tomas was signed for an undisclosed fee from Swiss top-flight outfit Lausanne-Sport.
However Canning, who has since added goalkeeper Fulton from Liverpool, insists that fans should not be concerned about the lack of changes to a squad that only avoided relegation thanks to a play-off win over Dundee United.
"The club have been great this year in backing us as much as they can," he said. "We weren't targeting eight, nine or 10 players.
"We are looking to bring four or five guys that will make a difference because this year we are in a good place again.
"Our young kids are coming through to give us squad players. We've got young Ryan Tierney, Ross Cunningham, Ronan Hughes, Shaun Want, Steven Boyd.
"If these guys were not coming through, I would probably be running about trying to bring in another five or six players from all over the place just to bulk up the squad."
Canning thinks some of the players breaking through have the potential to match the success of former Accies midfielders James McCarthy and James McArthur, who went on to command sizeable transfer fees and win caps for Republic of Ireland and Scotland respectively.
In the short term, he hopes they will follow the example of defender Scott McMann, who became a first-team regular after progressing from the youth ranks last season.
Canning needed another central defender after the summer exits of Jesus Garcia Tena and Danny Seaborne, plus long-term injury to captain Michael Devlin.
Meanwhile, Fulton is a replacement for Remi Matthews, who returned to Norwich City after his loan spell.
"We have been looking for a big dominant centre-back all summer," added Canning.
"It has been a long process and I can assure you you spend lots of hours on the computer looking at CVs - you get hundreds of them sent through every week and you're constantly looking through them, scared not to look at one just in case you miss something.
"So it's very time-consuming and Xavier stood out about a month ago and it was something we have been working on.
"Ryan, we kept an eye on him right from the end of last season when we knew Remi was going back.
"Initially, we were looking at getting him in on loan, but eventually we got a deal to make him our player, which is even better." | Hamilton's Martin Canning is biding his time to sign a striker - because his targets are waiting for approaches from clubs in England's top two divisions. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | It is the second property developer in a week to report a big rise in profits as the housing market recovers on the back of the UK's economic growth.
New home sales rose 28% to 6,408, compared with 5,022 a year earlier.
Persimmon said that average selling prices were 4.3% higher at £186,970 compared with £179,199 a year ago.
Jeff Fairburn, group chief executive, said he was encouraged that sales and reservations since the beginning of July had remained around 9% higher than a year earlier despite the "traditionally slower summer trading weeks".
He said the results demonstrated Persimmon's ability to deliver on its objectives as part of a ten year plan launched in 2012.
On Monday, Bovis Homes reported a 150% rise in pre-tax profits to £49.4m in the six months to the end of June compared with £18.6m a year earlier.
Persimmon also reported a 33% increase in revenue in its first half to £1.2bn, from £900m a year earlier.
It said it anticipated starting work on 100 new development sites before the end of the year, with building work already up by 26% compared with the first six months of 2013.
The property developer also invested in 14,251 new building plots, taking its total to 82,250 compared with 70,716 in the same period a year ago.
Property values nationally increased by more than 10% in the year to July, according to the latest Halifax house price index, as government initiatives to make it easier to access mortgages, such as the Help to Buy scheme, took effect.
And earlier this month, a survey showed that UK housebuilding grew at its fastest rate in nearly 11 years in July.
The Markit UK Construction PMI report said home building grew at its steepest rate since November 2003, driven by strong demand for new projects.
Persimmon said it was "encouraged" by the return to growth in mortgage loan approvals in June, after several months in which the number of loans approved seemed to go into reverse as lenders grappled with new affordability rules introduced in April.
The company said that continued moderate growth in mortgage lending would support both first time buyers - which are considered crucial to growth in the market - and growth in the construction sector, which despite a surge in activity in the last year remains well below its pre-recession peak.
Cadwaladers, established in 1927 in Criccieth, Gwynedd, has been bought out of administration in a deal that will see the business continue at nine of its 14 shops.
The company has coffee shops across north and south Wales, including Cardiff, Barry and Tenby.
Managing director Diane Brierley said the deal placed the company in a "strong position".
She added: "It has been a difficult few months, but... we believe Cadwaladers has the potential to come back stronger".
The country has refused to stop its nuclear programme and the bill was easily passed last week by Congress.
The sanctions attempt to cut off money North Korea needed to develop miniaturised nuclear warheads.
The US and China are negotiating over a UN Security Council resolution on new sanctions.
China has said some of the measures could cripple North Korea's economy.
Read more:
The sanctions freeze the assets of anyone doing business related to North Korea's nuclear or weapons programme or involved in human rights abuses.
The bill also allows for $50m (£35m) to support humanitarian programmes and transmit radio broadcasts into North Korea.
North Korea recently fired a long-range rocket, which critics said was a test of banned missile technology. State television announced that North Korea had "successfully placed a satellite in orbit".
The morning after that launch, Mr Obama said: "This is an authoritarian regime. It's provocative. It has repeatedly violated UN resolutions, tested and produced nuclear weapons, and now they are trying to perfect their missile launch system."
It came after the North's fourth nuclear test in January. Analysts say Kim Jong-un is looking to appear powerful before his important Seventh Party Congress in May.
"The bill was the first one exclusively targeting North Korea, which was passed in an unusually expeditious fashion. We expect it to provide a platform for the US to take strong and effective measures [against North Korea]," said South Korea's foreign ministry in a statement.
The South has said it will be discussing with the US the deployment of a missile defence system. | Housebuilder Persimmon has reported a surge in pre-tax profits for the six months to the end of June of £208.9m, compared with £132.9m a year earlier.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
More than 90 jobs have been saved at a Welsh coffee and ice cream chain.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
President Obama has signed off new expanded sanctions on North Korea over its nuclear programme, weeks after it launched a long-range rocket. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | It is understood that Wiggins, 36, told British Cycling in July that the honour should go to a female rider.
With seven medals, including four golds, he is Britain's most decorated Olympian alongside fellow cyclist Sir Chris Hoy, who was flag bearer in 2012.
Boxer Nicola Adams, long-distance runner Jo Pavey and tennis player Andy Murray are among the contenders.
The decision will be announced by the British Olympic Association on Wednesday.
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. | Sir Bradley Wiggins has ruled himself out of being Team GB's flag bearer at the Rio Olympic Games opening ceremony. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Chris Gard and Connie Yates announced their decision on a fund-raising website following Charlie's death.
The couple had appealed for cash to pay for overseas medical treatment for their son.
More than 84,000 people donated money to the cause.
Charlie suffered from an extremely rare genetic condition causing progressive brain damage and muscle weakness.
The parents of the 11-month-old, fought a lengthy legal battle with Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) to allow him to be taken to the US for treatment.
But they dropped their action after Professor Michio Hirano, the American neurologist who had offered to treat him, said it was too late for the treatment to work.
Charlie died on 28 July shortly before his first birthday.
In a statement, his parents said: "In the following weeks we will be setting up The Charlie Gard Foundation - a foundation that will help other children with mitochondrial diseases, and rare childhood illnesses.
"Too many children are losing their fight against rare medical conditions, which emphasises the need for more research, and we hope we can help deliver this through Charlie's foundation."
They also outlined plans for the charity to provide "information for parents that may find themselves in a situation like ours."
"There needs to be more clarity for parents about parental rights when it comes to making life-saving decisions about their children.
"Access to medical treatment, and expert clinicians, should never be denied if funds are available. We will be looking at ways in which we can help make things clearer for families and hospitals alike.
"We feel that the foundation will be a lovely legacy for Charlie, and we hope that you will all continue to support us in honouring the life of our little warrior as he helps other poorly children and their families."
The robbery in Huddersfield Road, Low Moor, Bradford, was on Thursday evening, said West Yorkshire Police.
The male suspect, who was wearing a balaclava, threatened staff before making off with cash.
The suspect is described as possibly Asian and being about 6ft (1.8m) tall and of "scrawny" build, officers making the appeal for witnesses said.
On Monday, it emerged that the Department of Health's permanent secretary emailed senior health chiefs.
Richard Pengelly expressed his concern about "overtly political tweets from colleagues across the service".
Jo-Anne Dobson said she would contact Sir Malcom McKibbin asking him whether his actions were "appropriate".
The BBC then obtained a different email sent to staff in the South Eastern Trust on Monday reminding staff to, "at all times remain publicly neutral in terms of expressing any political opinions for example, through social media".
Referring to Mr Pengelly's email, Mrs Dobson said she had spoken to "dozens of health workers about this issue".
"Setting aside the fact they are perplexed that the supposedly busiest permanent secretary in the country has time to monitor social media accounts, they are exasperated that of all the issues in the health service he should be focusing on at the moment, he decided this was one the most important.
"Richard Pengelly's intervention, only days before Northern Ireland goes to the polls, raises serious questions."
Mrs Dobson said she would ask if his intervention was "appropriate, especially in light of his relationship as the husband of a DUP candidate running in the current election and his presence at a counting centre last year, and if not what action will be taken against him."
The permanent secretary is married to outgoing DUP MLA Emma Little Pengelly. | Charlie Gard's parents have announced they will use £1.3m donated by well-wishers to set up a charity foundation to help other children with rare diseases.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man who robbed a bookmakers armed with a knife is being sought by police.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The UUP's health spokesperson has said she will write to the head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service over an email sent by a senior civil servant. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | He already faces charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, which he denies.
The ICC first indicted him in March 2009, but he has not been arrested.
A member of Mr Bashir's political party labelled the new warrant "ridiculous", but rebels in Sudan's western Darfur region hailed it as "a victory".
President Bashir is accused over the conflict in Darfur, where some 300,000 people are said to have died in seven years of fighting.
The ICC had initially declined to add genocide to the indictment but this has been overturned on appeal, with the judges finding "there are reasonable grounds to believe him responsible for three counts of genocide".
Pro-government Arab militias are accused of ethnic cleansing against civilians from the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa communities after rebels took up arms in Darfur in 2003.
Mr Bashir has denied that his government armed the militias, known as the Janjaweed.
Some 2.5 million people have been driven from their homes.
Sudan's leader has been unable to visit several countries for fear of being arrested since the first warrant was issued.
Many African and Arab countries have lobbied for the UN Security Council to postpone the prosecution, but this request has been rejected by countries such as the US and the UK.
Mr Bashir is accused of "genocide by killing, genocide by causing serious bodily or mental harm and genocide by deliberately inflicting on each target group conditions of life calculated to bring about the group's physical destruction", said a statement from the ICC.
"This second arrest warrant does not replace or revoke in any respect the first warrant of arrest," The Hague-based court said.
A senior member of the ruling National Congress Party, Rabie Abdelatie, called the move "ridiculous" and said the ICC was targeting not just Mr Bashir but the Sudanese people.
Sudanese Information Minister Kamal Obeid said in a statement: "The adding of the genocide accusation confirms that the ICC is a political court. The ICC decision is of no concern to us."
But Ahmad Hussein, a spokesman for Darfuri rebel group the Justice and Equality Movement, told AFP news agency the development was "a victory for the people of Darfur and the entire humanity".
Despite the charges against him, Mr Bashir was overwhelmingly re-elected as president in landmark elections in April.
The opposition, however, accused him and his supporters of rigging the poll and some major groups boycotted the elections.
Mr Bashir has always said the problems in Darfur were being exaggerated for political reasons.
According to the joint UN-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur, Unamid, 221 people were killed in Darfur in June.
This is a sharp fall since May, when some 600 people were killed - the deadliest month since January 2008, when the UN took joint control of the peace force.
Fighting intensified in May after the Justice and Equality Movement pulled out of peace talks.
Extern says it has been told the Intensive Family Support Service (IFSS) must close with the loss of 47 jobs.
It says the service supports 235 families affected by issues including poverty, mental health, and addiction.
The Health and Social Care Board said the scheme was operated "on a pilot basis" for three years from 2014.
Charlie Mack of Extern said he had support from parties across the political spectrum before the election.
"I have in writing from (DUP leader) Arlene Foster two days before the election saying she was personally supportive of the project".
Mr Mack described the decision as "devastating" and "a complete false economy".
He said: "IFSS is a life-altering, and often life-saving service, which is seeing 50% more children in Belfast being removed from the child protection register, is keeping children in school, and is significantly reducing anti-social and violent behaviours".
The Health and Social Care Board said it was "working with the Belfast Trust to ensure minimum disruption and impact to these families as the pilot comes to an end".
In a statement, the Department of Health said the pilot had come to an end and there were similar levels of need across Northern Ireland:
"Our focus now will be on taking the learning from the pilot in Belfast and applying it not only to statutory family and children's services but also to other family support services."
The department said families, "will continue to be supported by statutory services, where appropriate, or connected with other non-statutory family support services in the area".
. | The International Criminal Court has issued a second arrest warrant for Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir - this time for charges of genocide.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Northern Ireland charity says children will be the first victims of the Stormont collapse as one of its projects is to close. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The show, which is the longest-running production in the history of the Dominion Theatre, will have its final curtain call on 31 May 2014.
Written by Ben Elton, it currently stars Kevin Kennedy, best known as Coronation Street's Curly Watts.
On hearing of the closure, he tweeted: "Just when you get all the words right and in the proper places."
The show is based around Queen hits such as Bohemian Rhapsody, Radio Ga Ga and Another One Bites The Dust.
Critics were never kind to the £6m production, in particular its story - set in a dystopian future where music is banned.
When it opened in 2002, the Guardian said the plot "really is as sixth form as it sounds", while the Mirror declared that "Ben Elton should be shot".
Even Queen's drummer, Roger Taylor, had his doubts, telling Mojo Magazine the script was "slightly crass", although "it does have its good points".
"I do have an aversion to musical theatre, so it hasn't been easy," he added, "but I've learned to live with the musical."
Despite the criticisms, the production has been seen by more than 16 million people in 28 countries - and ranks among the top 10 longest-running musicals in West End history.
"We want to thank every one of the many hundreds of incredible musical theatre artists, musicians and crew with whom we've had the privilege of working at the Dominion since 2002," said Taylor, Elton and Queen guitarist Brian May in a statement.
"And, of course, the incredible audiences who have rewarded them with over four-and-a-half thousand standing ovations."
"It has been a privilege to have hosted We Will Rock You for the past 12 years," added David Pearson of the Dominion Theatre.
"To have the show rocking the Dominion and seeing a standing ovation night after night has been quite amazing.
"We wish the show every success for the future, as we now prepare to accelerate our restoration and refurbishment programme ready to welcome an exciting new production in 2015."
The news of the closure comes days after Queen announced a 19-date US tour, with singer Adam Lambert taking the place of the late Freddie Mercury. | We Will Rock You, the hit musical based on the songs of Queen, is to close in the West End after a 12-year run. |
Summarize the provided information. | Museums, business centres and libraries are among the buildings to benefit from the £12.6m investment in Wales.
Other buildings to house the hotspots include Cardiff Castle, Central Library, City Hall and St David's Hall.
Cardiff is the first Welsh city to take part in the £150m scheme to rollout superfast broadband across the UK.
UK Digital Economy Minister Ed Vaizey said: "The digital landscape of the UK is undergoing a period of tremendous improvement and is all part of the government's long-term economic plan.
"For business, visitors and the UK public, accessing wi-fi in our cities is absolutely vital."
Wales Office Minister Alun Cairns said he wanted Cardiff to have "world-class internet connectivity" so the city could take full advantage of the demands of the digital age.
He added: "It's great news that 30 public buildings across the city are set to be fitted with free wi-fi.
"This is a big boost for our capital city and will make Cardiff an even more attractive place to live, work and invest in."
The case was made by a lawyer for the Department of Infrastructure.
It is opposing a legal challenge, from environmentalist Chris Murphy, to the proposed route of the A6 at Toome in County Antrim.
The new A6 passes close to Lough Beg, a protected wetland which is an important habitat for overwintering swans.
However, the lawyer said it did not "traverse the defined boundaries" of the protected area.
He added court that survey work done after the building of the existing A6 showed swans foraging "right up to the road".
"It's people that disturb swans, not cars," he said.
The department's lawyer added that the proposed new dual carriageway had a relatively small impact on the foraging grounds for swans and that they regularly changed where they fed.
Earlier the court heard 133 landowners have had their ground vested along the proposed route.
The department has already bought the land and agreed compensation.
As Mr Murphy was not seeking the quashing of the vesting orders, if he won, the department would be left with the land and the compensation bill.
This, the lawyer said, would be a "severe potential public prejudice" not just to the public purse but to landowners who had not opposed the vesting orders.
Taylor was visibly annoyed to be replaced four minutes before half-time in Sunday's 2-2 draw with Chelsea.
Guidolin apologised after the game for the timing of the move and said there was no bad blood with his player.
"I have forgotten everything. For me the problem is gone and I think for Neil as well," Guidolin said.
"I would like to say it is not good for a manager to change a guy before the end of the first half. I spoke with him in the match after the substitution and in the dressing room in front of all the players.
"I spoke about the substitution in front of the world because I spoke in the press conference. For me there is no more problem, that is enough."
The Italian said no more discussions had taken place with 27-year-old Taylor since the draw at the Liberty Stadium.
Asked whether Taylor would play in Sunday's Premier League game at Southampton, Guidolin said, "We have three important games in this period and there is the possibility for him and for other players to play in one, two or three of these important games."
"He's available like other players."
After facing Southampton, the Swans have two home encounters with Manchester City, on Wednesday in the EFL Cup and a Premier League game the following Saturday.
Guidolin is not yet certain whether record signing Borja Baston will be fit to make his debut at St Mary's.
The £15m Spaniard, who signed from Atletico Madrid, has yet to appear in a Swans shirt because of a thigh injury.
"He is training with us. I hope he will be available for Sunday, it may be easier for Wednesday," Guidolin said. | More than 30 buildings are to become free wi-fi hotspots in Cardiff as part of a digital boost by the UK government.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The planned route of a controversial new dual carriageway in Northern Ireland does not cut through a protected wetland, a court has heard.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Swansea City manager Francesco Guidolin insists he has "no problem" with Wales defender Neil Taylor following their touchline spat. |
Can you summarize this passage? | Eileen Blane was thrown to the floor and punched during the burglary in Stretford, Greater Manchester.
David and John Blane said "bruises and injuries mean nothing" compared to losing the ring, given to her by her late husband 63 years ago.
They said the family had received thousands of messages of support.
Granddaughter Amy Blane shared pictures of her "brave Nana" on social media - her post has now been shared more than 83,000 times.
John Blane said: "Most people have been saying how despicable this character must be and how they really hope they do get caught.
"Everyone has a nana, everyone's got a mum who may be living alone and it could be anybody."
Mrs Blane managed to escape and alert neighbours while her attackers searched upstairs in Friday's burglary.
She suffered three cracked ribs and a damaged vertebrae and it is not known when she will be able to go home, her family said.
A CCTV company has installed cameras in her house for free so she will feel safe upon her return from hospital.
David Blane said she was most devastated to be without the ring given to her by her husband, who died 13 years ago.
"It's the only connection she has with my dad," he said.
His brother appealed for his mother's attacker to return the gold wedding band.
He said: "Even if you put the ring in an envelope and give it to us anonymously, just give it us back and that will take away most of the pain away for my mum."
Det Ch Insp Paul Parker of Greater Manchester Police said it was a "disgusting and intrusive" attack.
He urged witnesses to come forward. | An 87-year-old woman beaten in her own home has been left "devastated" after having her wedding ring ripped from her finger, her sons said. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | The lambs' identity was "protected due to their age and vulnerability", West Midlands Police said.
The woolly passengers were spotted after they were herded into the back of a car and driven around by suspected rustlers.
But the subsequent image circulated by the force turned out to be a joke.
Nic Barlow commented on Facebook: "I wondered why the picture looked a bit woolly."
Abbas Zen said: "It would be an animal rights issue if they didn't [blur the images]."
Other people were less amused by the force's sense of fun.
"Police show criminal sense of humour as they release pictures of stolen sheep with pixelated faces," tweeted Solene Deplanche.
Officers said three suspected sheep rustlers found in the car near Hob Moor Road, Yardley in Birmingham were rounded up in nearby gardens - with one up a tree and another penned in a conservatory.
The men aged 22, 27, and 28, were arrested on suspicion of theft, while police traced owners of the sheep.
Jokes aside, officers said the lambs were unhurt and have been temporarily re-homed on a farm in Sheldon.
By Dominic Casciani, BBC News home affairs correspondent
British police have guidelines over what information they reveal about victims of crime - but was there a bit of woolly thinking in the West Midlands force after journalists were given an image obscuring the faces of allegedly-rustled lambs?
The Data Protection Act and Article 8 of the Human Rights Act, which covers family and private life, require the police to protect personal information unless there is a good reason to release it.
My mint sources tell me that an officer in the case blurred the image as a joke.
He presumably concluded he had an obligation under the Ewe-ropean Convention on Eweman Rights to hide the poor little lambs' faces. | Social media sites have been rammed with confusion after police released blurred images of victims of crime - who happened to be sheep. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust was one of 11 trusts put in the improvement regime in 2013 after a government-commissioned review.
It was later taken out when inspectors deemed it had made "real progress".
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has now raised concerns over emergency, outpatient and maternity services.
The inspection, held between October and December last year, included Scunthorpe General Hospital and Diana Princess of Wales Hospital in Grimsby. Goole Hospital was not inspected as it was rated as good in October 2015.
CQC inspectors identified concerns across a number of services, including:
Ellen Armistead, deputy chief inspector of hospitals at the CQC, said previous improvements had not been sustained, and there had been an overall decline in the quality of care and patient safety.
"For this reason, we have recommended that the trust should re-enter special measures," she said.
"In particular, we would like to see significant improvements to the quality and safety of patient care."
Responding to the report, the trust said it was disappointed but fully accepted the the shortfalls identified.
Richard Sunley, its interim chief executive, said: "We are sorry we have let down our patients, their families and carers by not meeting the quality standards they rightly expect."
He vowed the trust would "make changes with pace".
Two weeks ago the trust was one of three placed in financial special measures in an attempt to help them meet their savings targets. | A hospital trust has become the first in the country to re-enter special measures after inspectors found patient safety and care had worsened. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Channel 4 have confirmed Andrew, Carolyne, Louis and Alex, from Brighton, will no longer appear on the show.
The family have been on the programme since it began in March 2013.
"Mr Michael has confirmed his proposed candidacy as a UKIP MP," Channel 4 told Newsbeat.
"Sadly any Gogglebox cast member who becomes a candidate for a political party will have to step down from their involvement in Gogglebox.
"It's with great regret that the Michaels are no longer in the show.
"They have been excellent contributors to Gogglebox, and we are very grateful for all they have given to the show."
Speaking to Newsbeat, Alex Michael said: "We sat down as a family and we discussed it at length, either we stay on Gogglebox and my Dad doesn't accept his position or he accepts the position and we can no longer be on the show."
Alex said she is gutted to be leaving the show and would have liked to have stayed on until the end of this series.
She said she fully supports her dad: "It was a hobby for him to begin with and it turns out that he was good at what he was doing and people really liked him.
"I'm proud of my dad to have got to where he is and we will be fully supporting him in his political endeavours from now on".
Mum Carolyne tweeted: "We've loved every min of our involvement. It's the best show on TV & I want to thank everyone for their wonderful support - we'll miss u."
Andrew will stand for the UKIP and contest the East Sussex seat of Hastings and Rye.
That seat is held by a Conservative MP.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube | The Michael family have left Gogglebox because the dad is standing as a UKIP candidate in next year's general election. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | First Minister Arlene Foster said the terms for an independent inquiry were worked out in consultation with the attorney general.
She said they were sent to Sinn Féin who, so far, had not responded.
However, Sinn Féin's MLA Conor Murphy said they were "insufficient".
"There has been no agreement with the DUP on the terms of reference of an independent investigation," he said.
"In order to restore public confidence in the political institutions we need an independent investigation, which is robust, transparent, timeframed and led by a senior judicial figure from outside the jurisdiction and with the power to compel witnesses and subpoena documents.
"Arlene Foster should step aside to facilitate that investigation pending a preliminary report."
Set up in November 2012, the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme was an attempt by the Northern Ireland Executive to help to increase consumption of heat from renewable sources.
It is approximately £490m over budget as businesses were receiving more in subsidies than they were paying for renewable fuel and the scheme became heavily oversubscribed. | Sinn Féin has said terms of reference drawn up by the head of the civil service for an investigation into the RHI debacle are short of what is required. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | It comes as Radio 1 has announced that the teenage cancer patient, who raised almost ??5m for charity before his death in May, will have an award presented in his name at this year's Teen Awards.
Jane Sutton added: "My son was courageous and inspirational.
"I'm immensely proud of everything he achieved."
The 19-year-old, from Burntwood, Staffordshire, died after launching an appeal in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust.
He made a bucket list of 46 things he wanted to achieve and raised money during the process.
The charity recently announced ??2.9m of the ??4.96m raised through donations and gift aid would be invested in specialist cancer units for young people.
Jane Sutton said: "When he first started fundraising for Teenage Cancer Trust, never in his wildest dreams did he think he would reach ??5 million.
"As well as all the other ambitious goals on his bucket list, he really wanted to help other young people with cancer. He has certainly done that.
"He wasn't going to let his cancer stop him making the most of every minute and he often used to say, 'I may have cancer, but cancer doesn't have me'."
This year's Radio 1 Teen Awards will take place at Wembley Arena to honour some of the UK's unsung teenage heroes as well as music, online, sport and entertainment stars.
Radio 1 listeners have nominated friends and family aged 12 to 17 for the awards in recognition of their bravery, strength and selflessness.
Previous listener nominations have included relatives, work colleagues, friends and carers.
As well as the Teen Heroes, other prizes include best British group, British vlogger, British actor and British sports star, which will be voted for by Radio 1 listeners.
Stephen Sutton's mother added: "We will never forget Stephen, his spirit will live on in all that he achieved and shared with so many.
"His selfless fundraising and positive attitude to life touched countless hearts across the world and the huge outpouring of love and support he received in return helped him throughout his journey.
"Stephen found the kind words and messages of support from so many people he didn't know deeply humbling and I know that it made him really happy.
"He loved life and wanted to live every day to the full, preferring to measure life in terms of achievement and not time."
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
In an interview, Palmer Luckey said currently no single Apple computer met the minimum specifications for the Rift.
The problem lay in the fact that Apple did not prioritise powerful graphics hardware, he added.
By contrast, HTC said its headset would work with Apple machines at launch.
Questioned at a Microsoft Xbox press event, Mr Luckey said support for the Oculus Rift headset on Macs depended on the way Apple built its machines.
"If they ever release a good computer, we will do it," he said.
"It just boils down to the fact that Apple doesn't prioritise high-end GPUs," he told the Shack News site. The Rift, and other headsets, typically require the computer to which they are connected to possess a powerful graphics card or GPU. Buying or building a machine to support the Rift has been estimated to cost about £1,000 ($1,500).
Some research suggests that fewer than 1% of the world's PCs are running hardware that can support VR headsets.
"You can buy a $6,000 Mac Pro with the top-of-the-line AMD FirePro D700, and it still doesn't match our recommended specs," he said, adding that the company would "love" to support Mac machines.
Apple has not responded to Mr Luckey's criticism.
In May last year, Oculus "paused" development of support for Mac and Linux computers in favour of getting everything ready for machines running Windows.
Oculus's stance is at odds with HTC which has said that its Vive headset would work with Linux and Mac machines from "day one". However, a VR testing tool released by HTC partner Valve last week currently only works on Windows.
The Oculus Rift headset is scheduled for release on 28 March and the HTC Vive headset will start shipping soon after on 5 April. | Stephen Sutton's mum has said her son "would have been really honoured to have a Radio 1 Teen Hero award named after him".
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The Rift headset will be available on Mac machines when Apple releases a "good computer," said the founder of the Oculus virtual reality firm. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | Mukesh Singh, Vinay Sharma, Akshay Thakur and Pawan Gupta were found guilty on all counts earlier this week.
Judge Yogesh Khanna said the case fell in the "rarest of rare category", rejecting pleas for a lighter sentence.
The woman, 23, was attacked on a bus in December and died two weeks later.
By Sanjoy MajumderBBC News, Delhi
Throughout the day the crowd built up steadily outside the court.
Unprecedented security was in place with the road to the court barricaded by police. Inside riot police took up positions as the lawyers were escorted in.
As Judge Yogesh Khanna read out the sentence one of the defendants broke down.
As news of the sentence was relayed outside, the crowd broke into a cheer. "Justice, justice!" they chanted. Others called for the juvenile to be hanged as well.
The parents of the victim - who were present in the courtroom - said they were satisfied with the verdict and justice had been served.
On Friday, Judge Khanna said the attack "shocked the collective conscience" of India, and that "courts cannot turn a blind eye" to such crimes.
"This case definitely falls in the rarest of rare categories and warrants the exemplary punishment of death," he added.
The men were convicted to death by hanging, and one of them, Vinay Sharma, broke down in tears as the verdict was announced.
The father of the victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said the family was satisfied with the ruling.
"We are very happy. Justice has been delivered," he said in the courtroom, according to the Associated Press news agency.
Earlier, protesters outside the court had demanded that the four men should be hanged.
As they were escorted to the courtroom, the four men shouted to the crowd: "Brothers, save us!"
They all deny the charges and can still appeal against the verdict to the Supreme Court and also ask the president for clemency - a process that could take years.
By Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent
Does the sentence bring closure?
The defence lawyers argued during the trial that their clients had been tortured and some of their confessions - later retracted - had been coerced.
There was unprecedented police security in Delhi on Friday.
The road to the court was barricaded by police, and inside riot police took up positions as the lawyers were escorted in, the BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in the Indian capital reports.
In August, a teenager who was found guilty of taking part in the rape was sentenced to three years in a reform facility, the maximum term possible because the crime was committed when he was 17. He also denied all the charges.
Another suspect, Ram Singh, was found dead in his cell in March. Prison officials said they believed he hanged himself but his family allege he was murdered.
Profiles: Delhi rapists
#100Women: Join the conversation
The December attack sparked a national debate on the treatment of women.
Tough new laws were introduced in March which allowed the death penalty - carried out very rarely in India - to be handed down in the most serious cases of rape.
Reacting to Friday's verdict, human rights groups said the death penalties would not end violence against women in India and that far-reaching reforms were needed to tackle the endemic problem.
"Sending these four men to the gallows will accomplish nothing except short-term revenge," said Tara Rao, Director of Amnesty International India.
"While the widespread anger over this case is understandable, authorities must avoid using the death penalty as a 'quick-fix' solution."
Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch's South Asia director Meenakshi Ganguly told the BBC: "The punishment of perpetrators is important but equally working together as a society to keep women safe is much, much more important." | An Indian court has sentenced four men to death for the gang rape and murder of a student in the capital Delhi, a case which led to violent protests across India and new laws against rape. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The leak suggested the Scottish first minister wanted David Cameron to remain as prime minister.
Mr Carmichael said it was an error of judgement and he accepted "the details of the account are not correct".
Ms Sturgeon said it had been a "blatant election dirty trick".
The confidential memo was published in the Daily Telegraph on 3 April as the general election campaign got under way.
It was written by a civil servant in the Scotland Office and claimed Ms Sturgeon told the French Ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann, that she would prefer Mr Cameron, the leader of the Conservatives, to remain as prime minister.
The memo also claimed that Ed Miliband, who was then Labour's leader, was not prime minister material.
The official cabinet office inquiry into the leaking of the memo said Mr Carmichael's former special adviser Euan Roddin gave the details to the Daily Telegraph - but he had Mr Carmichael's permission to do so.
Mr Carmichael said, while he had not seen the document before it was published by the newspaper, he was "aware of its content and agreed that my special adviser should make it public".
The Lib Dem MP for Orkney and Shetland also accepted "full responsibility for the publication".
Ms Sturgeon said Mr Carmichael, who had been a minister in the Tory-Lib Dem coalition government before the election, had attempted to cover up his involvement in the leak - and was only admitting it now "because he has been caught".
She added: "Mr Carmichael said at the time that the first he was aware of this matter was when he received a call from a journalist, but we now know that this is simply untrue. The false memo was leaked by a special adviser acting under the authority of Mr Carmichael.
"He knew all about it, but said in public that he knew nothing until a journalist phoned him.
"As well as the original dirty trick, which was bad enough, Mr Carmichael then tried to cover it up - and is only admitting it now because he got caught.
"He needs to seriously reflect on that - and reflect on whether his actions and attempt to cover them up are consistent with his position as an honourable member of the House of Commons."
The memo was written following a discussion between the civil servant, who has not been named, and the French Consul-General about a meeting Ms Sturgeon had with Ms Bermann.
It stated that part of the conversation between the ambassador and the first minister might well have been "lost in translation".
At the time, Ms Sturgeon said she rejected the claim "100%", while the French consul-general in Edinburgh, Pierre-Alain Coffinier, also said the memo was not accurate and that Ms Sturgeon had not expressed any preference for a prime minister.
The leak inquiry, which was ordered by the Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood, concluded that Mr Roddin's official mobile phone was used to call the Telegraph journalist and that Mr Carmichael "could and should have stopped the sharing of the memo".
Mr Carmichael has admitted that he should not have let Mr Roddin leak the memo.
Mr Carmichael, who is now the only Liberal Democrat MP in Scotland, has written to Ms Sturgeon and Ms Bermann to apologise - describing the leak as a "breach of protocol".
He said that, had he still been a government minister, he would have "considered this to be a matter that required my resignation".
Ms Sturgeon said she accepted Mr Carmichael's apology. The French embassy said it would not be commenting on the matter.
Neither Mr Carmichael nor Mr Roddin will take their severance payments as cabinet minister and special adviser. Generally, a lump sum, equivalent to three months of annual ministerial salary, is payable when a minister ceases to hold office.
The Cabinet Office report said the civil servant who wrote the memo believed it to have been an accurate record of the conversation that took place between him and the French Consul-General, but pointed out that he had already highlighted that it could have been "lost in translation".
The Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Haywood concluded that there was no reason to doubt that the civil servant recorded accurately what he thought he had heard.
The report said: "Senior officials who have worked with him say that he is reliable and has no history of inaccurate reporting, impropriety or security lapses.
"The Cabinet Secretary has concluded that there is no reason to doubt that he recorded accurately what he thought he had heard. There is no evidence of any political motivation or 'dirty tricks'." | Nicola Sturgeon has called on former Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael to consider his position as an MP after he admitted being behind the leak of a memo ahead of the general election. |
What is the summary of the following document? | They say there is a lack of evidence for the plans, which could see the time it takes to reach consultant level cut by two years.
They have called on the government to "pause" the training review.
A Department of Health spokesman said changes would only take place if they were in the best interests of patients.
Currently doctors spend the first two years after graduation rotating between about half a dozen different areas of medicine, such as obstetrics or A&E.
Many then specialise and stay within that area until they reach consultant level. Depending on which area they choose to focus on, that can take between eight to 10 years.
The Shape of Training review into specialist doctor training was chaired by Prof Sir David Greenaway of the University of Nottingham.
The report made 19 recommendations in 2013 for changes to medical training.
The wide-ranging review involved many leading medical organisations, including the General Medical Council (GMC), and other bodies overseeing medical education.
One proposal was to shorten consultant training to between six and eight years. Another was to allow doctors to be fully registered to practise when they left medical school, rather than waiting a year as they do now.
Sir David's report suggests an argument for changing the structure of training is that there are more patients with a complex mixture of conditions.
This means doctors need to have a greater breadth of knowledge, rather than specialising early in their careers, it says.
But leading doctors are worried these changes could mean they will be allowed to practise fully autonomously before they have gained all the skills they need.
The proposal would "result in people finishing training and being labelled as a consultant much earlier on, when in fact they are not reaching the same standard that patients have come to expect", Dr Tom Dolphin of the British Medical Association (BMA) junior doctors' committee told the BBC.
The BMA has called for a "pause" in policy development while safety concerns are addressed and said any changes should be piloted in small studies before being rolled out more widely.
The Royal College of Physicians has also raised concerns, saying shortening doctors' training would "compromise both quality of patient care and patient safety".
A Department of Health spokesman said no decision had been taken to shorten consultant training or change doctors' registration, adding that any changes would only take place if they were in the "best interests of patients and following appropriate consultation".
Meanwhile documents seen by the BBC have also raised questions about the transparency and political independence of the review.
An 18-month battle to reveal minutes of undocumented meetings between senior civil servants, politicians and the report's chairman concluded in court last month.
The GMC, which sponsored the review and provided administrative support, was forced to publish the details of numerous meetings with ministers and officials.
Notes from one meeting between Prof Greenaway and a Department of Health representative said they were eager the report would provide "an opportunity for ministers to be radical".
Minutes from another meeting, which involved other senior civil servants from the department, noted that: "Ministers [are] setting strategic direction and feeling happy".
Neither of these meetings, which took place during the review's call for evidence in 2013, was referred to in the final report.
The GMC said the notes were an informal record of the conversations, and the issues were raised to help "inform our thinking".
But the tribunal ruled against the GMC, saying: "We are satisfied that it is strongly in the public interest that these proposals are made on the basis of sound criteria and any political influence or otherwise needs to be transparent.
"There should be transparency relating to the process that led to the conclusions."
Ben Dean, a junior doctor who made Freedom of Information requests to reveal the content of the review, said the idea of shortening the training time for hospital consultants could be dangerous for patients.
"Generally trainees just want to become properly trained consultants, so they can actually practise with a degree of autonomy and not feel uncomfortable and out of their depth.
"Without doing anything to improve training quality, cutting training time is potentially harmful, particularly if you devalue what it means to be a consultant.
"The consultants do train the trainees so if your consultants are less skilled then there may be a knock-on effect."
A Department of Health spokesman said: "There was nothing other than routine engagement with Sir David Greenaway's independent report from anyone at the Department of Health."
Niall Dickson, the GMC's chief executive, said: "The independent review was established by the four governments of the UK to look at the changing needs of patients and the type of doctors that will be needed to provide high quality care in the future.
"There are recommendations made in the review that could require changes to postgraduate training and everyone accepts that more work needs to be done to understand the benefits and impact of such changes."
He added: "It is highly unlikely that there will be agreement about all of the issues but it is clear that work will be undertaken to look at the key issues." | Proposals to shorten in-job training for qualified doctors in the UK could seriously compromise patient care and safety, leading doctors have warned. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Lawrence Trace, 59, was diagnosed with Hodgkin Lymphoma in 2005 and his only hope was a bone marrow transplant.
There was only one suitable match on the worldwide register - 21-year-old Max Jeckeln from Raunheim, Germany.
Following the transplant in 2012, the pair built up a friendship over letters, emails and phone calls and finally met this week.
Mr Trace donated his Velothon Wales medal to Mr Jeckeln on Wednesday - a medal he said would not have been possible without the transplant, which took place at University Hospital of Wales.
He said he would not be alive today without Mr Jeckeln.
"I was very nervous, and it was very emotional," Mr Trace said.
"It was a very strange feeling to meet the man who saved my life. But it was also wonderful.
"I wanted to get in touch with Max to tell him that I was alive and kicking - and the relationship grew from there. He seems to love Wales."
Shortly after he was first told he had cancer, Mr Trace's sister was diagnosed with leukaemia, and later died. In 2011, his wife was also diagnosed with breast cancer, and recovered.
The bone marrow team at the Welsh Blood Service searched the worldwide register and found only one suitable match for Mr Trace - Mr Jeckeln.
"It was a 14 million to one chance that I would find Max. And then, even with the transplant, there was only a 16% chance that I would survive," Mr Trace said.
Following his transplant, Mr Trace's health steadily improved. He is now in full remission.
"I took Max up to Caerphilly Mountain to show him where I cycled, with his help," Mr Trace said.
"To anyone who is thinking of becoming a donor - just register. Even if the odds are overwhelming, I am proof that you can survive." | A man from Cardiff has met the German stranger who saved his life by donating stem cells. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Marc Carter, 42, from Devon, appealed on Twitter for people to search for a specific Tommee Tippee cup for Ben.
The 13-year-old has severe autism and will only drink out of the two-handle cup which is no longer manufactured.
The appeal prompted offers of help from as far away as Australia from people promising to send Ben their old cups.
Tommee Tippee also said it had a dedicated team looking for the cup in its archive of product samples.
Marc launched a Twitter appeal on Monday under the name @GrumpyCarer in which he said his son had used the specific Tommee Tippee cup since the age of two and would not drink from anything else.
He wrote: "Ben hasn't drunk at school since the age of 5, he doesn't drink outside the house so we can't go anywhere.
"People say he will drink when he's thirsty but two emergency trips to A&E with severe dehydration say otherwise."
Marc told the BBC his son has had his current blue cup for three years, but it is now falling apart and may only last a few more weeks.
He said: "The cup keeps him alive. If we lost the cup and couldn't find another Ben would die. He would be put on fluids in hospital but he would yank out the tubes.
"This tiny blue cup dictates our life."
Katie Roden tweeted a photo of the cup she owns, adding: "I have one - here it is! DM me your address and I will send it tomorrow."
Roslyn Barnett wrote: "I have that exact one my daughter had from being a baby!! Still have it and i can send it to you x".
Others responded with the suggestion that the cup could be made using a 3D printer if he was able to provide one to be copied.
Marc, who lives near Great Torrington, north Devon, said he had been overwhelmed with the response which saw one of his appeals retweeted 12,000 times.
He said one 16-year-old had used the particular cup as a child and had never wanted to throw it away - but offered to donate it to Ben after seeing the appeal.
The dad-of-three, whose two other children also have special needs, told the BBC: "I cried. It's been incredible. I didn't expect it.
"I've had people tweeting to say good luck and people looking in their cupboards for the cups. They don't know me - it's been amazing and moving.
"I feel humble. It's a lovely thing. I'm asking for a little blue cup and that is what is touching people.
"I've said I'd pay for the postage but people don't want it.
"Ben might need this cup for the rest of his life so it will be great to have stock. It would be life-changing."
Full-time carer Marc said he now had around seven replacements being sent to him and hoped to stock up on even more.
Tommee Tippee said it was touched by Ben's story and staff were doing everything they could to find a cup for Ben.
Sarah Scott, global head of consumer experience, added: "The cup he previously had was a Tommee Tippee cup that we made for Boots in the late 1990s and our team is currently looking through all our archive product samples to see if we have one that's just right for Ben."
Anyone who can offer Marc an exact copy can contact him on Twitter at @PMPProject. | A dad's desperate search to replace a little blue cup for his autistic son that he says "keeps him alive" has gone viral on social media. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Bethan Palmer, 26, of Newport, Stephen Pegram, 50, of Blackwood, Nicola Cook, 41, of Hengoed, Nicola Rees, 48, of Bargoed, Caerphilly County, and Stephen Brooks, of Cardiff, were convicted last month.
They were involved in claims worth £132,000 between 2009 and 2011.
The total number of convictions in relation to the scam has now hit 81.
Judge Daniel Williams said each claim involved "dishonesty sustained over a long time", adding the cost to motor insurance companies of this type of fraud is "immense".
He told the defendants: "The preparedness of people like you to make false claims has spawned an industry of accident management companies and teams of lawyers and doctors and others who are capitalising, knowingly or unknowingly, with fraud by unquestioningly processing false claims."
Palmer was given a 10-month sentence, suspended for two years, after she was found guilty of conspiracy to defraud and perverting the course of justice.
However, she made no claim herself and received no money.
Pegram was jailed for six months, after he was found guilty of conspiracy to defraud at Cardiff Crown Court over a £4,200 payment he received when his car was written-off.
In total, he was involved in £19,000 of claims.
Mother-of-two Cook was handed 12 months, following her conviction on the conspiracy offence; this related to a £5,500 injury claim she made.
Rees, a nurse, had a nine month sentence suspended for two years after she was found guilty of conspiracy to defraud in relation to £22,000 of claims.
Brooks, of Llanedeyrn - who was also convicted of the conspiracy charge with claims worth £19,500 - was handed a six month sentence that was suspended for two years.
The wider case, uncovered by Gwent Police's Operation Dino, involved 28 separate claims and 57 cars, costing the insurance industry more than £760,000.
It operated out of a garage based in Pengam, Blackwood, which was known as both St David's Crash Repair and Easifix and owned by the Yandell family.
Gwent Police has said they were the masterminds, providing the insurance fraud service for scores of friends and relatives.
Byron Yandell, 32, his father Peter Yandell, 53 and wife Rachel Yandell, 31, along with Gavin Yandell, 31, and Michelle Yandell, 52, were all jailed for between six and two years. | Five people snared in the UK's biggest car insurance fraud investigation have been sentenced at Newport Crown Court. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | The 11GB of data included social security numbers, names, addresses and salaries of some Socom staff.
All the workers, including some with top secret clearances, were employed by subcontractor Potomac Healthcare.
The company has now removed the data and said it was investigating the breach.
The cache of data was found unprotected on the net by researcher Chris Vickery, from security company MacKeeper.
It included details of nurses, doctors and mental health support staff as well as unit assignments and postings dating back to 1998.
The data appears to have been exposed when Potomac IT staff misconfigured a data back-up.
In a blog about the find, Mr Vickery said he had attempted to get the "publicly exposed" data taken off the net by contacting Potomac's chief executives.
Initially, Potomac had not seemed to take seriously his warnings that making the data public was a risk to national safety, wrote Mr Vickery.
After an hour, he had alerted other government agencies. And 30 minutes later, the data had disappeared.
The sensitive nature of the information, including security clearances and the deployment locations of staff, would make it very attractive to "hostile entities", said Mr Vickery.
"Let's hope that I was the only outsider to come across this gem," he wrote.
Potomac acknowledged Mr Vickery's help and said it was "addressing" the incident, in correspondence with tech news site ZDNet.
Booz Allen Hamilton, the contractor for whom Potomac is a sub-contractor, said it was also investigating.
Alloa - now third - lost 2-1 at home to Airdrieonians, while Livingston moved up to second with a 2-1 win at Peterhead.
Peterhead slip to bottom with Stenhousemuir's 1-0 win away to East Fife taking them up to ninth.
And Albion Rovers were 2-0 winners over Queen's Park, who are a point ahead of Stenny.
At Stair Park, it was goalless until Jackson struck in the 75th minute.
Livi went behind to Peterhead early on, Fiacre Kelleher heading the hosts ahead.
However, strikes by Danny Mullen - one either side of half-time - turned the match in Livi's favour.
Andy Ryan's shot and one from Ryan Conroy put Airdrie in control away to Alloa, who replied through Greig Spence's strike.
The only goal at Bayview was a Colin McMenamin penalty, awarded for a hand-ball by the Fifers' player-manager, Gary Naysmith.
And, in Coatbridge, Ryan Wallace's late strike added to Steven Boyd's long-range first-half effort as Rovers ran out comfortable winners.
About 50 firefighters remain at the six-storey Wharfside block, on Heritage Way, after the blaze broke out on the top floor at about 04:00 BST on Sunday.
People living in 120 flats were evacuated, with many spending the night in a rescue centre or a local hotel.
All the residents were evacuated, with no injuries reported.
Flames and plumes of smoke could be seen from several miles away.
An investigation has begun into how the fire started.
Steve Sheridan, from Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) said: "It's a total write-off for 50 or 60 flats, which is a sad state of affairs.
"This remains a difficult and complex fire and we do not yet have it surrounded or under control. We have worked immensely hard through the night in difficult conditions but we aren't on top of it yet."
He added: "It is desperately sad for the residents and our thoughts are with them as they watch their homes and all their belongings burn for such a prolonged period of time. We are really trying our best to bring this to a conclusion as soon as possible."
A rescue centre was opened at nearby arts centre The Mill at the Pier by Wigan Council.
Peter Layland, assistant director of housing at Wigan Council, said the affected properties were rented by private landlords.
He said: "We re-housed 50 people last night in a local hotel. We will be talking to them today about arrangements for tonight as well." | Sensitive details of health workers employed by the US military's Special Operations Command (Socom) have been exposed in a data breach.
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Brechin City replaced Alloa Athletic at the top of Scottish League One after beating Stranraer by a single goal, Andy Jackson getting the winner.
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Dozens of families have been told they "may never be able to enter their homes again" after a major fire destroyed 60 flats in Wigan. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | The corroded flares had been dumped at the tip on St Mary's.
The bomb squad flew over earlier and detonated them, Sgt Colin Taylor wrote on the Isles of Scilly police Facebook page.
He said: "There may be some small explosions heard from at Deep Point this morning." Investigations were under way to find those responsible. | Illegally dumped out-of-date flares on the Isles of Scilly prompted a bomb disposal unit to be flown out. |
Can you summarize the given article? | North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Trust announced it was to stop licensed fertility treatment, including IVF, at the University Hospital of Hartlepool.
Hartlepool Borough Council "summoned" the trust to the scrutiny meeting, but only a legal representative attended.
Hartlepool MP Iain Wright said the trust's decision was "contemptuous".
"I think there are serious questions to be answered and I think as a public body and with something as important as local hospital services, it's right that the trust is accountable to this council.
"I think it contemptuous and arrogant that the trust haven't taken the opportunity to be able to answer those very very serious questions at the meeting today," Mr Wright said.
The legal representative asked for an adjournment of the meeting, which was hoped to be a chance to put questions to the trust.
A trust spokesperson said: "The trust advised the council that they were not following a proper and due process by calling a clinician who is not an appropriate member of the clinical senate, qualified to give independent clinical advice to the council."
The trust said it made the decision to scrap services "reluctantly" after being unable to recruit enough embryologists.
Jake Turnbull from the Royal College of Nursing said: "The trust has claimed that the closure of this excellent unit is due to the fact that they can't recruit sufficient staff to the unit.
"But they were able to recruit to the unit as recently as May 2015, and in the three months to December 2015, they made no effort at all to recruit to the unit.
"If the real reason that they are closing the unit is because they want to remove a range of services from the hospital, then they should say so.
"They should also have a full public consultation, not do this on the sly."
Bev Andrews who had her daughter Rachel through IVF 21 years ago, said: "It's vital. We need this unit to stay open in Hartlepool... it will be a sad loss if it does all come to an end."
Roddie Mackay has been elected leader after beating Donald Manford by 18 votes to 13.
Norman A Macdonald has been re-elected to serve as convener. He secured 20 votes to Alasdair MacLeod's 11 in the vote on the post.
Usually, the comhairle does not formally set up an administration.
However, councillors are asked to elect a leader, convener and committee chairs.
The results of this month's council elections on the isles saw the election of 23 independent candidates, seven SNP and one Conservative.
Energise Galashiels commissioned artist Chris Rutterford to complete a design for wall space at Douglas Bridge.
It was unveiled by Lord Steel of Aikwood amid celebrations during the Creative Coathanger arts festival.
Nobody had applied for planning permission for the mural but a retrospective application has now been successful.
Planning officer Carlos Clarke said: "The colouring is relatively dark, so the image is not conspicuous.
"It is not for me to comment on the quality of the artwork but the image appears to be very high quality and worthy of both distant and close public exposure."
A third section of the colourful mural, featuring even more recognisable faces from the Galashiels area, is due to be unveiled next spring.
The former Glasgow and Sale second-rower, 26, concluded the deal with Toulouse president Jean-Rene Bouscatel, after it was revealed in November.
Gray, who has 46 Scotland caps, still has three matches of the regular season left with near-neighbours Castres.
They are three points off the top six play-off positions in the Top 14.
The last round is on Saturday, 5 June, with the play-offs starting on 11/12 June, and the final at Barcelona's Nou Camp on 24 June.
Gray, along with younger brother Jonny, has been named in the Scotland squad for two Tests in Japan on 18 and 25 June, with the party due to fly out on 11 June. | A Hartlepool MP has branded a health trust "arrogant" for failing to attend a public meeting over proposals to scrap fertility services.
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The leader and convener of Western Isles Council - Comhairle nan Eilean Siar - have been elected after both positions went to a vote.
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A mural to celebrate the return of trains to Galashiels has been granted permission to remain in place.
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Scotland lock Richie Gray has finalised his move from Castres to four-time European champions Toulouse on a four-year contract from next season. |
Please summarize the passage below. | It shows that acorns are ripening 13 days earlier, while rowan berries are ready to eat nearly a month earlier.
Experts warn that one consequence could be that animals' food reserves would become depleted earlier in the winter.
The findings were published by Nature's Calendar, a data collection network co-ordinated by the Woodland Trust.
"Some of the changes are really quite big and quite surprising," explained Tim Sparks, the trust's nature adviser.
"This caused me to go back and look at the data again to make sure it was valid because even I did not believe it initially."
Prof Sparks said Nature's Calendar, formerly known as the UK Phenology Network, was established in 1998 to collect spring-time information.
"But the gap in data was in the autumn So, since about 2000, the scheme has also been collecting data on things such as fruit ripening dates, leaf colour change and fall dates, and the last birds seen," he told BBC News.
"We now have 10 years worth of data that can look at and identify changes.
"In terms of looking at the fruit-ripening dates and the thing that came out was that they all seem to have steadily advanced over the past decade."
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Prof Sparks, from Coventry University, observed: "Rowan was the big one as it seemed to have advanced by nearly a month over the course of a decade."
He added that it was still uncertain what the ecological consequences of the advances would mean.
"Anything that changes out of synchronicity is likely to cause disruption," he said.
"What the actual consequences will be is slightly harder to work out. In this particular case, if all of this fruit is ripe earlier, and if all the mammals and birds are eating it earlier, what are they going to be feeding on during the rest of the winter?
"In terms of feeding birds, you have big flocks of thrushes coming down from Scandinavia and feeding on berry crops in Britain, and they tend to do that after they have exhausted the supply of berries in Scandinavia.
"You get these periods when hedges are being stripped bare, but the birds are going to have to do that earlier because that is when the fruit is ripe."
Although phenological records have shown that the arrival of spring is also advancing, Prof Sparks said it was "still a bit of a mystery" why the ripe-fruit dates had advanced over the past decade.
He suggested: "There is a very strong correlation between these ripening dates and April temperatures, and that might be a result of flowering dates - it might just be that warmer springs result in earlier flowering dates, and subsequently result in earlier ripening.
"But it might be a result of more sunshine; longer, warmer summers and therefore earlier ripening.
"So the exact mechanisms really are still a bit of a mystery. We know it is happening, but we are uncertain why."
Nature's Calendar is a web-based observations network and is a partnership between the Woodland Trust and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology.
To date, it has more than 60,000 registered recorders across the UK that observe signs of seasonal changes in the natural environment.
The trust is calling on the public to plant a million native trees in gardens as part of its "Jubilee Woods" project.
A spokesman said that the scheme would increase the abundance of food sources for birds and animals in future years. | Britain's native trees are producing ripe fruit, on average, 18 days earlier than a decade ago, probably as a result of climatic shifts, a study reveals. |
Write a summary of this document. | The railway line was closed between Newry and Dundalk after the device was found on the Barracric Road in Newry on Thursday.
The alert has ended. The railway line and the road have now reopened.
Police said the remnants of the device have been taken away for further examination. There was no damage or injuries.
Elsewhere, in north Belfast, the Ardoyne Road was closed between the Crumlin Road and Alliance Avenue after a suspect device was discovered.
Estoril Park was closed and a number of homes were evacuated.
Police say the security alert has now ended and all roads have reopened.
They say initial examinations suggest the device was not viable.
Residents have been allowed to return to their homes.
Earlier, the Ministry of Defence had confirmed one of its vehicles on its way to the Newry alert had broken down at Sprucefield, near Lisburn.
It said there was adequate support and no delay to its response.
The party said it has signed up 12,500 new members since last week - and is expected to reach its highest total in its history "within days".
Leader Tim Farron said Lib Dems are the only party opposing Mrs May's "hard Brexit agenda".
He insisted the party would not enter a coalition with the Tories or Labour.
The biggest membership number the Lib Dems have had since their formation was 101,768 members in 1994.
The recent flurry of interest means more than 50,000 members have joined since last year's European referendum - and more than 67,500 since the party's electoral low point, at the 2015 general election.
Mr Farron, who pledged to build the membership to 100,000 when he became leader in 2015, said reaching the goal "tells us that there's an appetite for change in British politics and Liberal Democrats are the vehicle for that change".
He said: "People want a strong opposition to Theresa May's hard Brexit agenda and the Liberal Democrats are the only party challenging them up and down the country."
In an appeal to would-be supporters, he said: "This election is your chance to change the direction of our country. If you want to stop a disastrous hard Brexit, if you want to keep Britain in the single market, if you want a strong opposition to fight for an open, tolerant and united Britain - this is your chance."
The Lib Dem leader also repeated his insistence that there are "no circumstances whatsoever" that the party will go in to a coalition with the Conservatives or Labour after the 8 June election, given the current approaches of those two parties.
He also dismissed an informal arrangement to offer his party's support on budget measures and other key votes to help a minority Tory or Labour administration.
On Sunday he told ITV's Peston on Sunday: "What Britain needs in this election is clarity and a contest. Theresa May has called this election because she believes it'll be a coronation.
"The Liberal Democrats are determined to make it a contest with a clear alternative position, and I don't want people thinking a vote for the Liberal Democrats is a proxy for anything else."
Nicky Cadden fired Airdrie ahead but Ciaran Summers' brilliant strike from distance levelled matters.
The visitors had David Cox sent off but they went ahead again when Jim Lister converted Cadden's cross.
Jamie McCormack equalised from close range and his second strike in stoppage time secured victory for Stenny. | Police have said a device found in Newry was viable and had exploded.
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Lib Dem membership has passed the 100,000 mark following a surge of new joiners since Theresa May announced a snap general election.
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Stenhousemuir's late victory moved them to within a point of Airdrieonians and the Scottish League One play-off places. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | And a third of more than 2,000 students questioned feared being unable to get to their polling station on the day.
The referendum, on 23 June, is outside term time, so many students will need to re-register at their home address, says the National Union of Students.
NUS vice-president Richard Brooks urged students "to think ahead".
"The EU referendum is a once-in-a-generation vote," said Mr Brooks.
"The decision made on the 23 June will impact young people and students the most, as they are the ones that will live with the consequences for the longest.
"If students don't want their future decided for them, it is essential that as many as possible get out and vote."
Mr Brooks urged students to think about where they would be on referendum day and to make sure they register or re-register at the right address.
"If they are unsure about where they will be, students can register at both their term-time and home address, providing they only vote once," he said.
"If they are going to be on holiday or are heading to Glastonbury, they should apply for a postal vote."
People had until 17:00 on 7 June to register if they wanted to vote in the referendum, he added.
It is also possible to apply for a postal or proxy vote by 17:00 on 8 June.
The interviews, carried out this month on a representative sample of students from across the UK by YouthSight for Universities UK, found:
Universities UK and the Association of Colleges are holding voter registration drives at institutions across the UK.
Students will be advised to register, re-register or apply for proxy or postal votes, according to their circumstances.
UUK chief executive Nicola Dandridge said it was of "real concern" that so many students were unaware of the referendum date and that they might have to re-register to vote at another address.
"From this week, universities will be scaling up their efforts to encourage students to register to vote, and to make sure they do so in the right location," she said.
"With nearly two million UK students eligible to vote in the referendum, it is vital that they have all the necessary information to make sure they can take part in this hugely important decision." | UK university students believe the EU referendum is key to their future, but almost two-thirds do not know when it is, suggests research. |
Can you summarize the following information? | The first time I met him was when I was away with United. We were in Portugal and he could've scored a hat-trick that day
The 18-year-old makes his way into the gym and sees a vision beyond the ocean of dumbbells, cardiovascular machines and medicine balls.
He sees a culture of success and witnesses the camaraderie that binds together a group of winners with the same thirst for improvement.
All the while, he envisages stitching his own patchwork around the template laid out before him and extracting every last ounce of potential from the talents gifted to him.
Cristiano Ronaldo's speed and skill were evident at the Estadio Jose Alvalde in a friendly against Manchester United for Sporting Lisbon in August 2003, assets and a performance which ultimately sealed a £12.24m transfer to Old Trafford days later.
It was in Manchester that the Portuguese sought out the expertise of a man by the name of Mike Clegg - the Old Trafford club's power development coach between 2000 and 2011 - as he began his quest to not only become the greatest player on earth, but an athlete with no equal in the modern game.
"He was a lively lad," Clegg told BBC Sport. "Carlos Queiroz was instrumental in getting him to United, but Sir Alex Ferguson did most of the talking and I observed the lad in front of me.
"He came across as a really determined boy and Ferguson and Carlos really liked that about him, but I didn't realise quite how determined he was until he came into Carrington and I got speaking to him.
"Ronaldo was a natural talent, a rough diamond, but he crammed in thousands and thousands of hours of graft to turn himself into the perfect player.
"I look at the other players who come and go with talent. Nani and Anderson both came in during 2007 at a similar age to Ronaldo, but the difference was astronomical. The difference was the understanding and the knowledge of how to become the best. Ronaldo was above everyone else."
The use of resistance-based workouts were unheard of at Carrington prior to Clegg's arrival, but football's evolution into a game dominated by athletes was just beginning, as basic programmes were introduced to improve functional, football-related strength among the squad.
Players were initially trained to become proficient in the art of bench-pressing, pull-ups, dips and squats - now the staple gym diet of a top-level footballer.
Ryan Giggs, a man Clegg describes as the most open-minded to new training techniques, Roy Keane, a lover of boxing during his recuperation from a serious knee injury, and Paul Scholes, the star pupil during cognitive and peripheral vision tests, were three leading members of a gym culture that formed in the aftermath of United's treble-winning success at the turn of the millennium.
Ronaldo was a keen observer. A vacancy had arisen to join that elite group following the departure of David Beckham - another member of the 'gym club' - to Real Madrid, and though his English was limited at best and his frame more featherweight boxer than sculpted Adonis, Ronaldo wasted little time in turning his vision into reality.
His physical evolution incorporated all facets of athletic performance, with additional sprint and reaction work polishing up his raw, genetic gifts.
But it was the mastering of strength workouts and Olympic lifts - total body exercises performed in an explosive manner at pace - that were behind the development of a muscular physique that has gone on to adorn billboards and magazine covers across the world.
Deadlifts and power cleans were two favourites in his gym routine, with the level of resistance and speed of execution slowly increased over his near six years in Manchester.
Clegg added: "I would say, physically, he is the perfect specimen. From his height to his natural body type, muscular structure, how much fat he's got in his system, his endurance capacity, flexibility, power and strength - they are in perfect balance.
"He had in his mind, 'I need to make myself special and I'm going to have to learn everything I need to become special. I'm going to have to regiment my day and my week, months and years and become as good as I can be by every possible means.' He had a plan."
It seems strange looking back, but in Ronaldo's early years at the Theatre of Dreams there were doubts he would make the grade at all.
He's always improving and because of that, he is the best.
His penchant for showboating rather than delivering the final pass and a fondness for falling over the outstretched legs of defenders a little too theatrically angered team-mates and opposition alike.
Each season, his manager, mentor and the man the 28-year-old still refers to as 'boss', Sir Alex Ferguson, would agree a pre-season wager over a target number of goals for the campaign. At the end of each of his first two seasons at the club, targets of 10 and 15 goals proved beyond him.
He wasn't fazed. The sight of Ronaldo strapping weights to his ankles and perfecting step-overs long after his team-mates had headed for the showers became a common sight at Carrington.
He invested in himself financially too. The purchase of a house with a custom-built swimming pool to aid him in his recovery after sessions and matches was another sensible addition, while the hiring of a chef at his home ensured his diet was faultless.
Clegg said: "For every mistake he made in a game, he'd spend hours and hours and hours practising to make sure it didn't happen again. Generally with players, if they try something and it doesn't work, they don't try it again, they fear it - but he didn't. No chance.
"We did speed, power and reaction work, everything he needed and worked with on the pitch. So much of my work was tailored around him. I even went to Montreal and looked at cognitive devices and different ways of working that would extract that extra ounce out of him."
The hard work paid handsome dividends. Ronaldo lifted a hat-trick of Premier League titles between 2007 and 2009, as well as the Champions League in 2008 - a success which saw him named World Player of the Year for the first time that same year.
In his own mind, his time at Old Trafford was done.
"He said to me, 'Mike, this is it. I've done everything here, I'm going to move on'. He supported Real Madrid and he knew it was time to leave," says Clegg.
"He'd have loads of little sayings, 'Manchester, it's raining all the time,' he used to say, but he loved being here, yet he knew he was on a journey and he knew it was going to take him somewhere else."
That somewhere else was the Santiago Bernabeu, with destiny - and the small matter of a then world-record £80m transfer fee - seeing him move from United to Real Madrid in 2009.
Trophies have been harder to come by in Spain, with Ronaldo winning one La Liga,one Copa del Rey and the Supercopa de Espana in his four years there to date, but on an individual basis he continues to surpass his own remarkable standards.
In 2013 alone, the Portugal captain scored 66 goals in 56 appearances and is already Madrid's fifth-highest goalscorer of all-time.
There is surely little room left for improvement, but Middlesbrough boss Aitor Karanka, who worked alongside Ronaldo at Madrid for three years as Jose Mourinho's assistant, believes he can still get even better.
"I had the pleasure of working with Cristiano every day. Ronaldo and Lionel Messi are definitely the two best players in the world," said the former Spain international.
"I think the difference is tiny between them both but I think when you look at the number of goals he has scored over the past year, then Ronaldo is the best.
"Ronaldo improves every day. Look at his numbers three years ago and you think, 'It's impossible he can do better,' and then you look at him this year and he's done better again.
"He's always improving and because of that, he is the best."
The Real Madrid player claimed the 2013 Fifa Ballon d'Or prize in Zurich on Monday, the second time he has been voted the world's best player.
Few who spent time around the gyms at Manchester United and Real Madrid would argue he deserves anything less. | A spindly teenager with an unruly mop of curly hair strides through the corridors of Manchester United's Carrington training complex and embarks on his path to greatness. |
Summarize the provided section. | The first minister wants the Scottish government, along with the UK's other devolved administrations, to have a "direct input" in the process.
She will make that point at the British-Irish summit in Dublin later.
Downing Street said it will "work with and listen to" the devolved administrations on a range of issues.
Prime Minister David Cameron has pledged to negotiate a "better deal" for the UK in Europe in advance of a referendum on the UK's membership of the EU which is due to be held by the end of 2017.
The SNP had demanded a so-called "quadruple lock" to make sure Britain's exit from the EU was dependant on all four nations voting for it in the referendum.
The 24th British-Irish Summit is being held in Dublin and features leading figures from the UK Government and administrations from Scotland, Wales, Ireland and the UK islands.
Speaking ahead of the meeting, Ms Sturgeon said: "This issue of European membership can't simply be put into a reserved box because the decisions the European Union takes, the terms of the UK's membership, impacts on our economy, impacts on jobs, impacts on industries like fishing and farming and issues like climate change.
"These are all responsibilities of the Scottish government. So you can't simply put it in a box and say it's got nothing to do with the Scottish government. These things matter a lot to people right across this country."
Scotland's first minister said the devolved administrations "cannot be kept in the dark" over EU negotiations which she said could jeopardise the UK's place in Europe.
She added: "It is absolutely essential that Scotland's voice, and those of the other devolved administrations, is heard to ensure our interests are acknowledged.
"That is why I am today calling for a forum to be identified which gives the devolved governments a direct input to the negotiations to ensure that our priorities are listened to and our vital interests are protected."
"The Scottish Government unequivocally supports our membership of the EU.
"At the same time, as I made clear when I visited Brussels recently, I don't believe the EU is perfect and it can be reformed to work better for its citizens."
A Downing Street spokesman said: "The government's objective is to renegotiate the UK's relationship with the EU and to address people's concerns, and then make the case for the UK stay in the EU on a reformed basis.
"Of course we will continue to work with and listen to the devolved administrations on a whole range of issues." | Scotland's voice must be heard during the UK government's current negotiations with the European Union, according to Nicola Sturgeon. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Full council set Ceredigion's second homes council tax rate at 25% from April 2017, and agreed to allocate the money back to communities via town and community councils.
But opposition councillors are worried some of money will be diverted away.
The council said a group is being set up to discuss options.
A workshop was recently held for councillors to discuss how the funds raised from the second homes council tax would be distributed.
Gethin James is a councillor for Aberporth.
He said the reason he backed the recommendation last March was the money "would come back to the community council to spend on the community".
"It's been 10 months since that decision was taken and nobody from the county council has written to the town or community councils to tell them of the decision," he said.
Mr James attended the workshop and said: "The leader started talking about Growing Mid Wales [a community group] and that she wants to change the decision of the council and put the money into a joint project between us and Powys."
Councillor Gill Hopley said seconds homes have a "detrimental effect" on communities like New Quay, which she represents.
"We haven't got youngsters with families coming to live here," she said.
She said the community runs the museum, library and memorial hall and the money from second homes would allow them to develop further.
Ms Hopley said she "strongly believed" the money should still "come back to the communities that need it".
Ceredigion council confirmed a workshop was held to "discuss the methodology for distributing funds, and making the best use of money".
In a statement, the council said: "It was agreed that a task and finish group should be established to discuss options and provide recommendations to the council about the best way of distributing money in a legal and transparent manner." | Fears have been raised Ceredigion council could backtrack on a decision to give communities the money it makes from a tax on holiday homes. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | The Shin Bet security service said about 60% of all funds sent to Gaza by the World Vision charity was being diverted to the Islamist movement.
It said Hamas recruited the charity's head of Gaza operations, Mohammed Halabi, more than a decade ago.
World Vision said it had no reason to believe the allegations were true.
It said it carried out regular audits of its Gaza programmes and was "shocked" by the charges.
"We will carefully review any evidence presented to us and will take appropriate actions based on that evidence," a statement said.
Hamas (either the organisation as a whole or in some cases its military wing) is designated a terrorist group by Israel, the US, EU, and UK among other countries.
A Hamas spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri, said the group had "no connection to [Mr Halabi] and therefore, all Israeli accusations are void and aim to suppress our people," Reuters news agency reported.
In the wake of the accusations against Mr Halabi, Australia said it was suspending funding to World Vision until investigations into the matter were complete.
Shin Bet said Mr Halabi was arrested at the Erez border crossing in June and has now been charged with funding terrorism.
It said the aid money he funnelled to Hamas, and to its military wing the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, amounted to about $7.2m (£5.4m) a year.
Mr Halabi set up fictitious projects, including ostensibly to help farmers and disabled people, falsely registered Hamas members as employees, and invented and inflated invoices, siphoning off money to the group, Shin Bet said.
The security service said these funds were used, amongst other things, for the digging of tunnels intended to be used for attacks on Israeli civilian communities, the building of military bases and for the purchase of weapons.
It said one base costing $80,000 was paid for in cash from UK donations.
However, it said there was no evidence that the Christian charity's main office had been aware of Mr Halabi's alleged actions.
Sadiq Khan has a back-story that may appeal to people who've never cast a vote in their lives.
He grew up on a south London housing estate, one of eight children, his father a bus driver. His children went to the same primary school as him. The Tooting constituency he represented since 2005 is where he's lived all his life.
In the second decade of the 21st Century some might argue the fact he is Muslim should pass unremarked. But his accession to City Hall would, for many, be a powerful statement of the city's diversity.
Some worry it may have the potential for division, but Khan has so far proved himself an inclusive campaigning force.
He's managed to be difficult to pigeonhole, occasional glimpses of radicalism disturbing the general picture of conformity which saw the human rights lawyer fit quite smoothly into the late New Labour model.
Is it sometimes a bit too smooth; is the calculation too obvious, ask some observers?
His victory in the Labour selection race trumps - for him - the campaign which won Ed Miliband the Labour leadership, in which Khan played a big part. The reward was senior roles as shadow lord chancellor and shadow justice secretary.
Some felt his association with the Miliband years would hamper his mayoral bid, but there was compensation in a reasonable result in London in May when the party gained seven seats.
Dame Tessa Jowell may have started as favourite, and was consistently ahead in the limited polling which was done.
But Khan - as shadow London minister - has spent the last few years closely involved in local election campaigns and getting his face seen around the capital's constituency groups.
He had the support of around half of London's Labour MPs and many senior figures in local government.
But victory appears to have been clinched because of the influence of the unions. Several endorsed him directly and he appears to have benefited from the Corbyn effect.
He came in for some flak from his rivals when he reversed his previous position and came out against expanding Heathrow Airport.
That is not his party's current position, but it seems to have been another careful calculation designed to neutralise the ace held by Zac Goldsmith, who it is assumed will line up against him in the race for City Hall. | Israel has charged the Gaza head of an international charity with diverting millions of dollars of foreign funds to the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
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As he now seeks a mandate from five million Londoners, his personal and political journey will be scrutinised like never before. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | British American already owns 42% of Reynolds, the company behind brands including Camel and Newport.
Last month it proposed buying the rest of the business to create the world's biggest tobacco firm.
But both Reuters and Bloomberg report the deal has been rejected. Reynolds declined to comment on the reports.
British American, which makes brands including Rothmans, has been a shareholder in Reynolds since 2004. The FTSE 100 company is offering $20bn in cash and $27bn in shares for the US business.
At the time of the bid BAT said the merger was "the logical progression in our relationship" and estimated it could produce cost savings worth $400m.
If the buyout went ahead, it would be the biggest foreign deal by a British company in recent years, and go against the idea that a weak pound would stop British companies buying foreign rivals.
RJ Reynolds has been operating since 1875 and is the second-largest tobacco company in the US after Altria, which owns Philip Morris USA.
Last year, Reynolds completed its $25bn takeover of US rival Lorillard. The combined company was forced to sell a number of brands, including Kool, Salem and Winston, to satisfy regulators. They were eventually bought by Imperial Tobacco - now Imperial Brands - for $7.1bn. | US cigarette maker Reynolds American has rejected a buyout offer worth $47bn (£38bn) from British American Tobacco, according to reports. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Carwyn Jones believes the "status quo" has worked well.
West Wales and the valleys - which had some of the highest number of leave voters in the EU referendum - qualified for more than £2bn in aid between 2014 and 2020.
The payments are due to end after Brexit.
Publishing its general election manifesto on Monday, the Conservative party announced plans to replace the method with a "shared prosperity fund" if it wins the June 8 vote.
The manifesto suggests the current EU scheme is "expensive to administer and poorly targeted" and wants it replaced with something "cheap to administer, low in bureaucracy and targeted where it is needed most".
While the Tories pledged to consult Welsh ministers on the changes, Mr Jones believes funding should continue to go where it is now.
He said: "To my mind what we need to do is the UK government needs to guarantee the level of funding that we have had so far from the EU, and that funding should be distributed according to the rules we have now, keep the status quo, it has worked very well for Wales.
"It is the same for agriculture and fisheries for example."
Mr Jones said it should not be "one government telling everyone else what is going to happen".
Instead, he wants the party that wins the UK general election to sit down with representatives of the devolved administrations to work out a way forward.
Plaid Cymru has promised to demand Wales continues to receive "every single penny" of the money it currently receives from the EU, once the UK leaves.
Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Mark Williams said EU aid had been essential "in creating and safeguarding jobs, bringing our infrastructure into the 21st century".
He said if his party won the election, it would invest £100bn in creating jobs, building homes and the green economy.
New club captain Carl McHugh has also been offered new terms by the Scottish Premiership side, with both players having 12 months to run on their deals.
Moult scored 18 goals last season and the 25-year-old is working his way back from groin surgery.
"There have been no offers for Louis at this stage," said Robinson.
"We have offered Louis a new contract. We are negotiating with him and we're hopeful that he will stay."
Moult has flourished at Fir Park since joining from Wrexham in 2015 and he also netted 18 goals in his debut campaign.
"We can't pay what other teams can pay, we know that - but Louis is loved here," added Robinson.
"The fans adore him and he has been brilliant for the football club, and the football club have been brilliant for Louis as well. They have given him a platform to play.
"It's something we were keen to do. I made it clear to the board and the board backed it fully that we put an offer to Louis. It's up to Louis whether he takes that or not.
"If he doesn't, fine, he will still be a massive part of what we do - but if he does it would be a big, big boost.
"Boys that have done well we try and reward with another year. We can't reward with an extra £500-600 a week, we just don't have that kind of money.
"We have offered Carl a new contract as well. We would like to sit down with another couple of players in the near future. Finances dictate we can only do a couple at a time."
Midfielder McHugh, 24, joined from Plymouth last summer and has taken over the captaincy from Keith Lasley, who has retired from playing to join Robinson's coaching staff. | The way EU funding is given to Wales' most deprived communities should not be changed immediately after Brexit, the first minister has said.
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Motherwell manager Stephen Robinson is "hopeful" top scorer Louis Moult will stay at the club next season after the striker was offered a new contract. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Peter Harte and Niall Sludden both scored two points to help the visitors into a 0-5 to 0-3 half-time lead.
Tyrone keeper Niall Morgan saved Dean Rock's penalty before Aidan McCrory netted the only goal.
Reds Hands forward Mark Bradley was sent-off on 50 minutes while the Dubs fired over the last five points with Dean Rock levelling in added time.
The All-Ireland champions also finished with 14 men with James McCarthy forced off with an injury in the dying minutes after the hosts used all their substitutes.
Tyrone enjoyed a first-half wind advantage and should have led by a greater margin at the break, but they kicked eight wides to leave the Dubs just two points back.
Conor Meyler slotted over Tyrone's other point in the opening 35 minutes while Philly McMahon, Rock and Jonny Cooper were on target for Dublin.
Declan McClure increased the gap to four points on the restart before Morgan's superb save from a penalty awarded for Sean Cavanagh's foul on Rock.
Tyrone were quick to capitalise with McCrory hitting the bottom corner on 46 minutes after he was played in by McClure.
Mickey Harte's team were now five in front but Bradley was shown a straight red-card four later after clashing with Cooper.
Tyrone led by the same margin after Rock and Sludden exchanged scores.
The rest of the game belonged to the Dubs with Rock starting the comeback before Ciaran Kilkenny and Brian Fenton rattled over.
Rock made it a one-point game before the forward's composed equalising strike from 53 metres.
Mayo defeated Kerry 0-15 to 1-10 in Tralee in Saturday night's other Division One game.
Elected mayor of Copeland Mike Starkie said United Utilities' (UU) "lack of communication" had "caused great concern" in West Cumbria.
Some residents complained of rashes, mouth ulcers and upset stomachs after drinking the water.
UU has apologised for its lack of communication but said "numerous" safety tests had been carried out.
Water and scientific services director Martin Padley said change in supply "can cause understandable concern".
"I can reassure everyone that our regular analysis and monitoring of the water supply shows that even though it's different it still meets the same high quality standards," he said.
Mr Starkie said he was "disappointed that United Utilities did not consult or inform residents about the change", which would have avoided "some distress".
The company said it has been running drop-in sessions for residents to explain the plans for the water supply and its effects.
The Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI) has tested samples provided by UU and says the water is safe to drink.
The introduction of harder water containing more minerals explained some changes noticed by customers, such as it making a "popping" noise when boiled, it said.
UU is in the process of stopping supplies from Ennerdale Water in the Lake District to protect rare freshwater mussels and is currently supplementing supplies with harder water from boreholes near Egremont.
Eventually a new 62-mile (100km) pipeline being built from Thirlmere Reservoir will provide water to about 150,000 people.
Abstracting water from Ennerdale will cease once the new £300m pipeline is complete in 2022. | Tyrone let slip a five-point lead as Dublin fought back for a draw in the Division One encounter at Croke Park.
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A water company under fire after a change in supplies has been told to improve customer communications. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | They were found near the banks of Isleworth in west London as pupils took part in a wildlife project close by.
"I couldn't believe it," said Jason Davey from Berkshire, who alerted the teacher when he discovered the blades.
The Port of London Authority said most of the blades had been collected but it advised people to take extra caution when in the foreshore area as some may have been missed in the mud.
"Because this is a fast flowing tidal river some are no doubt already elsewhere in the river," Jon Beckett from the Port of London Authority said.
Mr Davey said: "I couldn't believe it to be honest. I looked down and saw all these razor blades. I've no idea what was going through the mind of whoever did this."
Anyone who spots a razor blade or other harmful material on the river is asked to contact the Port of London Authority.
The 30-year-old Brazilian left for Paris St-Germain in a £50m deal in 2014, having won the Champions League, FA Cup and Europa League with Chelsea.
He won three domestic trebles before rejoining in August for around £34m.
"I don't always like the easy life," he said. "That's why I took a risk and I'm very happy. It was the right decision."
The defender continued: "I love the risk. In your life if you don't take a risk you're not going to taste something new. Not just in your professional life, I think it's every day.
"I cut my salary to come back here. But it's OK. God has given me a lot so I'm very happy with this."
Luiz has an FA Cup winners' medal, but missed the 2012 final against Liverpool with a hamstring injury before returning as Chelsea won the Champions League on penalties.
"I don't want to miss this one. I want to play, I want to try to give my best for the team," he added.
Chelsea are seeking the league and FA Cup Double for only the second time in their history and Luiz credits Italian manager Antonio Conte for masterminding the title-winning campaign in his first season in England.
"Conte is a great person, a great character and he's passionate - he loves football," the Brazilian enthused.
"The day I arrived here we talked together and he tried to explain his philosophy to play football.
"He said to me: 'You are the player I want in my team and to improve my team.' And then I said to him: 'I'm going to work hard for you and for the team.' And that's it." | More than 500 razor blades have been dumped in the River Thames.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
David Luiz says his decision to take a pay cut and return to Chelsea has been vindicated by the chance of completing the Double in Saturday's FA Cup final. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Dutch sailor Dorian van Rijsselberghe, who won gold in 2012, will retain his title.
Dempsey, 35, won silver in London, having taken a bronze in Athens in 2004, and will retire after this event.
"Tomorrow's a day off and my birthday, and Sunday is my last ever race so I'm going to want to win," he said.
"I feel very happy to have won a silver medal," Dempsey added. "It's cool, it's amazing.
"It's nice to have had a good spell at the top and be competitive over five Olympic Games. I'm pretty proud of that.
"I'm unemployed as of next week - I'll have to get a job. I'd like to do photography if I can make it work, and a bit of coaching. I'd like some new challenges and new goals and I want to keep being driven in life and achieve something else."
Friday's result is subject to protest and both Dempsey and Van Rijsselberghe will still have to sail in Sunday's medal race.
Beijing 2008 bronze medallist Bryony Shaw is through to the women's RS:X medal race and is eighth overall, after three fourth places on Friday.
London 2012 runners-up Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark won their only race of the day to go top of the women's 470 class, while Luke Patience and Chris Grube are up to third in the men's event.
Two-time world champion Nick Thompson is fourth overall in the Laser class after a 24th and seventh on Friday, while reigning Laser Radial champion Alison Young posted a seventh and 10th to move ninth overall.
Dylan Fletcher and Alain Sign are 14th overall in the 49er after day one, while Charlotte Dobson and Sophie Ainsworth are seventh in the 49erFx.
Giles Scott resumes competition on Saturday as Finn class leader, and Ben Saxton and Nicola Groves restart second in the Nacra 17. | Britain's Nick Dempsey is guaranteed silver in the men's Olympic RS:X windsurfing before the final day of competition on Sunday. |
Write a summary for this information. | New York Giants kicker Josh Brown admitted physically abusing his ex-wife in documents released by police from an investigation in 2015.
No criminal charges were brought at the time but the NFL banned Brown for one game and will now review the documents.
"We have some new information here," Goodell told BBC Sport.
"We'll evaluate that in the context of our policy and we'll take it from there."
Goodell was speaking before it emerged that Brown had been placed on the commissioner's "exempt list" while the NFL investigates his case.
This means Brown, 37, will still be paid but cannot attend practices or Giants games and will not be counted on the Giants' 53-man roster.
Brown has not travelled with the Giants to London for this weekend's game against the Los Angeles Rams at Twickenham.
Giants co-owner John Mara has admitted in the build-up to the game that Brown told the club about the domestic abuse.
"We'd like to speak to the people involved, whether it's the victim or the people involved that may have information, including law enforcement," added Goodell.
"But we understand that in certain cases they may not be permitted to talk to us, or want to talk to us, and we don't make judgments on people where they do that.
"What we want to do is get the facts and when we get the facts, we're going to aggressively pursue that, and we'll apply our policy."
The NFL toughened its domestic violence policy after it was criticised when Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice received only a two-game suspension in July 2014 for assaulting his then fiancee, now his wife.
He was later banned indefinitely when a video emerged of him punching his fiancee in the face but won an appeal against the punishment.
The new rules could lead to a six-game suspension or a lifetime ban for a second offence.
The NFL has also been condemned for imposing one-game bans for domestic abuse when players have been fined for excessive touchdown celebrations.
"I understand the public's misunderstanding of those things and how that can be difficult for them to understand how we get to those positions," added Goodell.
"But those are things that we have to do. I think it's a lot deeper and a lot more complicated than it appears, but it gets a lot of focus." | NFL commissioner Roger Goodell insists the league takes the issue of domestic abuse "incredibly seriously" and is "not going to tolerate it". |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Although there had been previous warnings linking smoking and lung cancer, it was the 1962 study by the Royal College of Physicians, Smoking and Health, that really broke through to the public and politicians.
Attitudes in the intervening 50 years have changed enormously.
But in 1962, very few people took the dangers posed by smoking cigarettes seriously.
That view is captured perfectly by some footage from the BBC archive, a report on the Tonight programme into the RCP study.
One man who says he smokes between 20 and 25 cigarettes a day is - by today's standards - amazingly fatalistic.
"Quite honestly, I think that the end of one's life is probably more in the hands of almighty God you know, than in my own hands or the hands of the tobacco manufacturers."
The reporter asks another man whether the enjoyment he gets from smoking is worth the risk.
"I think so, yes. If I'm going to die, I'm going to die, so I might as well enjoy life as it is now."
Watching the footage now, it seems impossible that people could have been so blase about the risks smoking poses to their health.
The 1962 RCP report was launched in a blaze of publicity, using what was then a new technique - the press conference.
But the report's authors needed to be innovative to get their message across to a public - and politicians - who probably didn't want to hear it.
After all, most of them were smokers
In 1962, about 70% of men and 40% of women in the UK smoked.
And they smoked everywhere - on trains and buses, at work, even in schools and hospitals.
Fast forward 50 years and how times have changed.
The busy street outside the pub or office is now the smokers' domain.
And today about 21% of men and women smoke.
Smoking has become a minority occupation.
Prof John Britton, chair of the the present-day RCP's tobacco advisory group and director of the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies, says the 1962 report has had a lasting legacy.
How does smoking affect health?
How long does it take to suffer withdrawal symptoms?
"Modern tobacco control policy as promoted by the World Health Organization and used internationally, is really based on recommendations that are in that report.
"So 50 years later we're still, in many countries in the world, just starting to deal with recommendations that were made there.
"It really set the scene for effective tobacco policy and led the world."
The landscape changed profoundly and relatively quickly.
In 1965, cigarette advertising on television was banned in the UK while in 1971 health warnings appeared on cigarette packets.
Further restrictions followed, culminating in the ban on smoking in enclosed public places like bars, pubs and restaurants, introduced in 2006 in Scotland and the following year in the rest of the UK.
But there has been a social change in smoking too, says Dr Penny Tinkler of the University of Manchester.
"If you go back to the 60s for men, it was cross-class, and for women, it was cross-class but with particular emphasis among those who were comfortably off.
"It's really shifted over the decades in terms of who is smoking so now instead of being associated with affluence, it's more associated with disadvantage.
"In part it's because people who can afford to give up, or people who have a better quality of life, can give up.
"It's always been harder to give up if things have been difficult so it's not surprising those people in difficult circumstances are less inclined to give up."
Smokers, once comfortably in the majority, now find themselves on the outside.
A small group huddled in front of a Manchester office block reflected the feeling among many smokers that they are now marginalised.
"Sometimes you do feel a bit of an outcast if you're out in a restaurant or in a pub or something," said one woman.
"I'm not happy, I'm not proud of it. I won't encourage my children to do it - I go outside at home," said her colleague.
How alien those views would have seemed to the smokers of the 1960s.
But more change is coming.
From next month tobacco products will be banned from public display in big supermarkets. Ministers are seriously considering plain packaging for cigarettes.
And 50 years on, tobacco still has a powerful hold over millions of lives. | Fifty years ago on Tuesday, a key report was published that marked the beginning of a change in our relationship with smoking. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | The university's congregation - which is made up of academics and administrative staff - voted down a call to axe the retirement age.
Paul Ewart, a 69-year-old professor of physics at Oxford, said it was "disappointing... but not the end".
Oxford University said its rule created "career progression" and "inter-generational" fairness.
Prof Ewart has described the rule as "age discrimination" and said it affected many colleagues still teaching at "the peak of their form".
He said he and his colleagues respected the vote but individuals could still take their cases to employment tribunals.
Gill Evans, emeritus professor at Cambridge University, who has been involved in the Oxford campaign, said: "Nobody is surprised, everybody involved sees this as a stage in the process."
The Equality Act prevents employers from forcing workers to retire at 65, although employers can still implement a compulsory retirement age where they can justify it.
A motion to scrap the university's rule was debated by Oxford's congregation on 16 May, but was lost by 143 votes to 64.
Campaigners then triggered the postal vote of all members the congregation - around 5,000 in total - over the future of the EJRA.
The ballot closed on Friday but was defeated by 1,142 votes to 538.
Oxford University said the postal vote was the sixth time in three months that the congregation had considered the "employer-justified retirement age" and that it had supported the policy every time.
"By any standard, the frequency of discussion and voting has been exhaustive and the considerable majority against abolition speaks for itself," it added.
Multiple lawsuits filed against the National Football League (NFL) allege that it hid knowledge of concussion risks.
The average individual payout would be $190,000, with younger men receiving awards between $1m and $5m.
Players' lawyers say the money will be used to compensate families and for medical testing.
The NFL expects 6,000 of its approximately 20,000 retired players to develop Alzheimer's disease or dementia in their lives.
The deal could cost the league more than $1bn over 65 years.
Conor Morgan, from Kilcoo, County Down, was working on the site near Shott Farm on Hamilton Road in High Blantyre at about 09:45 BST on Wednesday.
Paramedics treated Mr Morgan, but he died at the scene.
He worked for Newry firm Re-Gen Waste but was working at the Avant Homes construction site.
Canon Sean Rogan of St Malachy's Parish said the local community is heartbroken.
"Conor was a very hard working member of the parish. He leaves a wife and three teenage boys," he said.
"We had a five thirty mass here on Sunday morning, on Easter Sunday, a dawn mass, and Conor was there at that mass and then after that he got his lorry and went off to work in Scotland. It's so sad, so tragic."
In a statement, Re-Gen Waste described Mr Morgan as a popular employee who would be missed by the "entire Re-Gen family".
Avant Homes said an investigation has been launched and all work at the site had been suspended.
A spokeswoman for the company said their thoughts and condolences were with Mr Morgan's family.
The base, in Sheffield, is one of ten across England and Wales set to shut by 2017 as the service works to meet a 14% budget reduction.
South Yorkshire has been served by the NPAS since April 2013 with a helicopter based in Sheffield for ten hours a day.
The NPAS said despite the closures it is "normally" able to reach 98% of the population within 20 minutes.
Simon Wilkinson, of the NPAS, said: "The closure of NPAS Sheffield is part of a national programme of planned activity to ensure that essential air support remains in place to support the police forces of England and Wales at a significantly reduced cost to the public.
"The decision to close NPAS Sheffield was based on an impact assessment of the ability of the National Police Air Service to provide air support to police forces in line with areas of the greatest threat, harm and risk to the public."
The nearest base is Carr Gate in Wakefield, which operates 24-hours a day. | Academics at Oxford University have failed in a new bid to challenge rules forcing them to retire at 67.
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A judge has approved a plan worth $1bn (£665m) to compensate former American football players with head injuries.
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A 45-year-old man who died whilst working on a building site in South Lanarkshire in Scotland was from Northern Ireland.
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The National Police Air Service (NPAS) helicopter base in South Yorkshire has closed. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The event is to raise awareness of the importance of cycling for exercise and as a way to reduce fossil fuels.
Organisers say riding naked also highlights the fragility of the human body and the need for drivers to be more careful on busy city streets.
The movement began nine years ago in Canada and has been held every year in various cities around the world.
Traffic in Mexico City came to a standstill as onlookers stared in amazement or took photographs of the cyclists - naked or semi-naked - streaming past some of the city's most famous landmarks.
The rally ended in Zocalo Square.
Correspondents say that although the city has introduced a series of bike-friendly policies, millions of vehicles clogging the streets every day make cycling a serious challenge.
One cyclist, named only as Mila, said stripping off was the best way to get their message across.
"In Mexico it is a nightmare to ride a bicycle," she said. "It's almost as if you don't exist, you are a ghost."
Fellow cyclist Yovana Floyd added: "We fear going out every day and not knowing if we will return to our homes."
Mexican media estimates that about 300 cyclists took part in the demonstration. | Thousands of naked cyclists have ridden through the streets of Mexico City to mark the World Naked Bike Ride. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Developers had earlier won an appeal against an Aberdeenshire Council decision to reject the proposal.
Lawyers for local residents Nicola Brown and Edna Booth argued in the Court of Session that the Blackdog works could pose a danger to health.
But Lady Smith said the earlier appeal had been considered legally.
The substation development at Blackdog is just a few miles from the American tycoon's Menie estate and golf course.
Mr Trump claims the wind farm development would spoil the view from his complex.
Researchers found that less than a third of experimental clinical trials in the UK were available in Scotland.
The data also showed that only 19 of the 39 trials which could help patients under the age of 16 were available.
Campaigners at Cancer Research UK said the lack of trials for younger patients in Scotland was "deeply worrying".
The figures were revealed at the National Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) conference in Liverpool on Tuesday.
One author of the study and chairwoman of the NCRI Teenage and Young Adults Clinical Studies Group, Dr Angela Edgar, said: "Our study confirms that children and young adults in Scotland have fewer clinical trials available to them compared to the rest of the UK.
"The most disadvantaged are 16-24 year olds.
"There are fewer trials for them to begin with, and unlike younger children, they are often treated at centres where trial recruitment in this age group may be unfamiliar and overlooked."
Researchers in Edinburgh looked at clinical trials data from the UK Clinical Research Network Cancer Trials Portfolio, and found that, of the 534 clinical trials suitable for patients aged 16-24, only 152 were available in Scotland.
Problems can arise when hospitals only treat a small number of young cancer patients, as staff may not be used to recruiting this group for clinical trials, according to the NCRI.
It also said there was a lack of information about clinical trials available for younger patients, making it more difficult for hospitals to refer patients.
NCRI clinical research director Professor Matt Seymour said: "Compared with most countries, cancer patients in the UK are much more likely to be offered the chance to take part in clinical research as part of their treatment.
"Participating in research is a 'win-win': it brings direct benefits by ensuring you get access to modern treatment and intensive support; but it is also the best way to contribute to improving treatment for patients in the future.
"So, it is hugely important to highlight groups where we could do better and Dr Edgar's study throws down a challenge to increase the access to research for young people in Scotland."
Israel-born Schlesinger, who won gold at the same venue in May, missed the events in Paris and Dusseldorf because of illness and injury.
But in Baku she went straight to the semi-finals as top seed and outclassed Khanim Huseynova of Azerbaijan.
The 28-year-old then beat Slovenian Andreja Leski in the final.
Schlesinger's superior experience and physicality told and she was able to secure the arm lock and force Leski to tap.
The result also earned the British judoka 1000 world ranking points. | Two campaigners have lost a bid to stop the construction of electricity substations for the Aberdeen offshore wind farm opposed by Donald Trump.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Young people with cancer in Scotland have fewer clinical trials available to them, according to a new study.
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Britain's Alice Schlesinger marked her first competitive outing of 2017 with gold in the -63kg class at the Baku Grand Slam in Azerbaijan. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | Michael Pendry, 55, had 658 "filthy images" of children in his cottage in the grounds of Radnor Primary School, Cardiff.
He was caught after sharing the images online with other paedophiles for "sexual gratification".
Judge Huw Rees at Cardiff Crown Court said: "I am taking a risk in you."
Pendry admitted three counts of possessing indecent photographs of children and one count of possessing extreme pornographic images involving animals.
He was given a three year community order to complete a sex offenders treatment programme.
After the blaze at Daw Mill Colliery on 22 February, UK Coal warned that mining might not be able to resume.
The company now says a small team will remain on site to secure the mine over the coming months, but the majority of its 650 staff will be made redundant.
Kevin McCullough, chief executive of UK Coal, said it was a "terrible week".
Daw Mill is the last remaining deep mine on the Warwickshire coalfields, and one of the last in the UK.
Reaction to job cuts
UK Coal said last month's fire had been the largest at a UK coal mine in more than 30 years and was continuing to burn "ferociously".
Over the past year, the company has announced restructuring programmes at the mine and in August it said it was "unlikely" the mine would remain open after 2014.
At the time, UK Coal said it had made overall losses of £20.6m in the six months to 30 June, with Daw Mill contributing to a 20% fall in production.
About 56 million tonnes of coal is estimated to remain at the site.
Mr McCullough said: "This has been a terrible week, not just for the company and its employees but also for the energy security of the country, as it brings an end to 47 years of coal production at Daw Mill.
"Having successfully completed the restructuring, and being only weeks away from returning to healthy production, this ferocious fire has dealt a blow to everything we tried to achieve over the last 12 months - in just 10 days."
He said deep mines at Kellingley, in North Yorkshire, and Thoresby, in Nottinghamshire, along with surface mines, would continue to produce coal for use in power stations across the UK.
Mr McCullough said they were looking at whether they could transfer some miners from Daw Mill to those other collieries.
He said the company was also working with the government to help manage the closure of the mine.
Ray Sweet, deputy leader of North Warwickshire Borough Council, said the loss of the mine would be "almost a disaster" for the area.
He added that councillors would be holding an emergency meeting later to discuss how to help the affected workers and their families.
He said: "I can understand UK Coal's situation. The fire in the mine is at dangerous levels and it could blow at any time and that's what they are worried about.
"The one plus from this is that there were no men trapped in the mine by the fire, and you don't want to put anyone else at risk."
Nuneaton MP Marcus Jones called for the colliery to be mothballed rather than completely closed.
The Conservative MP said: "There is still a vast amount of coal down there and there is always the possibility that it could be mined again in the future."
Chris Kitchen, of the National Union of Mineworkers, said the news was "devastating" for the men who relied on the colliery and their families.
He said: "We tend to find many of our members who work in the mining industry have known nothing else."
He said union officials were now determined to get the workers the redundancy settlements "they deserve".
Andrew Mackintosh from UK Coal said that it is the company's "aim" to give the workers their full redundancy pay and that discussions are under way.
He said: "We've got redeployment under way we've moved probably about 50-100 people, but unfortunately for the vast majority, we just won't be able to deploy everybody." | A primary school caretaker who admitted collecting more than 600 indecent images of children has walked free from court.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Hundreds of jobs will go at a Warwickshire coal mine hit by an underground fire last month, owner UK Coal has announced. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Higuain dinked a shot past Cagliari keeper Rafael from Claudio Marchisio's pass before half-time.
He later slid Paulo Dybala's pass under Rafael early in the second half to become this season's joint top scorer in Serie A with 18 goals.
Cagliari midfielder Nicolo Barella was sent off for two bookable offences.
Barella, the home side's best player, was already on a yellow card when he caught substitute Miralem Pjanic late from a Juventus throw-in.
Allegri's side recorded a fifth successive Serie A win, restoring their seven-point lead after it had been cut by wins for Napoli on Friday and Roma earlier on Sunday.
Roma's 2-0 win at Crotone moved then above Napoli into second - and came with a goal and a penalty miss from Edin Dzeko, who is level with Higuain on 18 league goals.
Juventus' manager has been linked with the job at Arsenal in recent days, amid speculation that Arsene Wenger may leave at the end of the season.
Allegri dismissed those suggestions before Sunday's visit to his former club, stating he is happy in Turin and he hopes for "another 300 or 400 games" as Juve boss.
He has every reason to want to stay at present - his team have responded brilliantly to the tactical switches he has made since a surprising 2-1 league defeat at Fiorentina on 15 January.
That result prompted Allegri to abandon his 3-5-2 set-up in favour of a 4-2-3-1 formation so he could accommodate all of his key attacking players.
It has worked, as Juve have won five league games in a row since the change, without conceding a goal.
They were ruthless when their chances came; they waited 37 minutes for a breakthrough, scoring with their first serious effort on goal through Higuain, then broke from a Cagliari corner for a stylish second shortly after half-time.
Juve keeper Gianluigi Buffon was troubled just once, turning aside a 20-yard shot from Fabio Pisacane; at the other end, Rafael made a superb late save to stop Dybala's close-range header after Mario Mandzukic had hit the bar.
England goalkeeper Joe Hart enjoyed a victory mixed with frustration, as Torino beat bottom club Pescara 5-3, having been five goals up before conceding three in a sloppy last 16 minutes.
Andrea Belotti scored twice for Torino to take his season's total in Serie A to 17, but the home side lost their way, with Arlind Ajeti conceding an astonishing dragged backheel flick own goal as the visitors fought back.
Inter Milan overcame the absences of Mauro Icardi, Ivan Perisic and Marcelo Brozovic - and the disappointment of last weekend's defeat by Juventus - to beat Empoli 2-0 and move into fifth, with Eder scoring the first and creating the second for Antonio Candreva. Atalanta rare fourth after winning 3-1 at Palermo.
Roberto Inglese got over the disappointment of seeing an early penalty saved by scoring his first Serie A hat-trick as Chievo won 3-1 at 10-man Sassuolo, while Sampdoria scored three in the last 10 minutes to earn a 3-1 victory over Bologna.
Match ends, Cagliari 0, Juventus 2.
Second Half ends, Cagliari 0, Juventus 2.
Mario Mandzukic (Juventus) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Artur Ionita (Cagliari).
Attempt saved. Davide Di Gennaro (Cagliari) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Artur Ionita.
Substitution, Juventus. Mario Lemina replaces Paulo Dybala.
Mario Mandzukic (Juventus) is shown the yellow card.
Foul by Mario Mandzukic (Juventus).
Davide Di Gennaro (Cagliari) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt saved. Paulo Dybala (Juventus) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Mario Mandzukic (Juventus) hits the bar with a header from the centre of the box. Assisted by Juan Cuadrado.
Foul by Miralem Pjanic (Juventus).
Marco Sau (Cagliari) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt saved. Artur Ionita (Cagliari) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Davide Di Gennaro with a cross.
Corner, Cagliari. Conceded by Leonardo Bonucci.
Foul by Mario Mandzukic (Juventus).
Simone Padoin (Cagliari) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt blocked. Mario Mandzukic (Juventus) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Miralem Pjanic.
Attempt missed. Paulo Dybala (Juventus) left footed shot from outside the box is too high from a direct free kick.
Davide Di Gennaro (Cagliari) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Paulo Dybala (Juventus) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Davide Di Gennaro (Cagliari).
Substitution, Cagliari. Simone Padoin replaces Fabio Pisacane.
Corner, Juventus. Conceded by Marco Capuano.
Attempt missed. Miralem Pjanic (Juventus) right footed shot from outside the box is too high.
Mauricio Isla (Cagliari) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Daniele Rugani (Juventus) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Mauricio Isla (Cagliari).
Attempt missed. Bruno Alves (Cagliari) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left from a direct free kick.
Foul by Sami Khedira (Juventus).
Víctor Ibarbo (Cagliari) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Substitution, Cagliari. Víctor Ibarbo replaces Marco Borriello.
Attempt missed. Gonzalo Higuaín (Juventus) left footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Alex Sandro with a cross following a set piece situation.
Attempt blocked. Paulo Dybala (Juventus) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked.
Sami Khedira (Juventus) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Marco Capuano (Cagliari).
Attempt missed. Mario Mandzukic (Juventus) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Paulo Dybala with a cross.
Attempt blocked. Bruno Alves (Cagliari) header from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Davide Di Gennaro with a cross.
Corner, Cagliari. Conceded by Gianluigi Buffon.
Attempt saved. Fabio Pisacane (Cagliari) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. | Gonzalo Higuain scored two as Juventus marked boss Max Allegri's 100th Serie A match in charge with a win that leaves them seven points clear at the top. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Troy Paul was attacked at about 13:00 BST on Saturday in the Kingstanding area of the city.
The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared at Birmingham Crown Court on Wednesday and spoke only to confirm his identity.
Two men, aged 20 and 24, arrested in connection with the investigation, have been released on bail.
See more stories from Birmingham and the Black Country here
The boy has been remanded in custody until a plea hearing on 25 September.
The trial is expected to begin on 2 January 2018 and to last three weeks. | A 15-year-old boy is to face trial for murder after the fatal stabbing of a 23-year-old man in Birmingham. |
Write a summary of this document. | The six-storey, cube-like structure beat buildings in Ireland and Alaska to win the Royal Institute of British Architects' Lubetkin Prize.
Designed by Thomas Heatherwick, the so-called "Seed Cathedral" is pierced by 60,000 transparent acrylic rods that each contain a seed.
RIBA president Ruth Reed called it "an outstanding emblem for Britain".
In Pictures: RIBA awards 2010
The prize is named after world-renowned architect Berthold Lubetkin, designer of the Penguin Pool at London Zoo.
The winner was presented with a concrete plaque based on that design at a ceremony at RIBA's London offices.
Almost 250 countries and international organisations are showcasing their culture at the World Expo.
Some 70 million visitors are expected to visit the event, built this year around the theme of sustainable development.
Matt Warren, of Swansea's TechHub and the Veeqo online retail firm, called on the Welsh Government to offer more loans as well as grants and for Finance Wales to become less "risk averse".
He said high risk business was needed for growth and employment.
But Finance Wales said it was committed to fostering a vibrant and positive technology sector in Wales.
Mr Warren made the calls as his firm Veeqo, which helps online retailers increase profit by managing orders across different websites like Amazon and Ebay, launched an online campaign to raise £2m from venture capitalists.
Established in 2013 in Mr Warren's kitchen, the company now employs 30 people, and has a £1m revenue. In 2014, it received a £50,000 Welsh Government Digital Development Fund grant, which Mr Warren said helped him attract private investment.
But he has now called on the Welsh Government to introduce more repayable loans, as well as grants.
"The sort of companies who are interested in grants don't tend to be the ones who want to grow really big," he said.
"With a loan, the company is going to have spend the money well and think really hard about what they want to do with it."
Finance Wales need to become more innovative, he said, and added that the institution is "government-led and risk averse."
"The tech industry is high risk, but it brings big rewards," he added.
"Finance Wales tend to invest in more low-risk, traditional industries. But these aren't the companies who are going to employ thousands of people in the future."
But Steve Smith, technology venture investments director at Finance Wales, said a number of funds support new digital firms, including the £10m Wales technology venture investment fund and the £7.5m technology seed fund, both backed by the Welsh Government.
Finance Wales also have a team who specialise in helping early stage technology companies.
He said: "Since April this year, this team has invested over £5.5m in nearly 30 Welsh companies. An active co-investor, our investments are usually matched by the private sector.
"We're committed to fostering a vibrant and positive technology sector in Wales."
And a Welsh Government spokesperson said Veeqo had "thrived with their support".
It said it was aiming to launch a Development Bank of Wales next year, and that latest figures showed "above average survival rates" for companies backed by the Welsh Government.
The spokesperson added: "We are always seeking to improve, and are currently working on refreshing our economic priorities so we can continue to build a fairer, more prosperous, and more secure Wales.
"Business finance is one of many issues being considered as part of this work."
Veeqo's growth reflects a rise in Swansea's digital sector.
The city's TechHub, which Mr Warren co-founded, houses 20 digital start-ups, employing up to 300 people.
Swansea is set to be the first area of Wales to receive an ultra fast broadband connection, the city council plan to set up a 'city digital district', and Swansea could be home to the world's largest interactive digital screens for learning about science and technology.
Prof Paul Hannon, director of Swansea University's institute for entrepreneurial leadership, said: "Matt's success with Veeqo is an inspiring story that will provide further encouragement to Welsh small to medium enterprises (SMEs) looking to take their businesses to the next level, which will undoubtedly add significant value to our local economy." | A UK pavilion built for the World Expo in Shanghai has won a prestigious international architecture award.
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More needs to be done to encourage "big risk and rewards" businesses in Wales, a technology entrepreneur has said. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Baroness Randerson said adding it to the Wales Bill on further devolution would give "clarity" on the issue.
Speaking ahead of a House of Lords debate on Tuesday, she also called on the new Conservative-majority UK government to devolve policing, youth justice and more power over energy.
She urged ministers to publish the full bill soon, not just a draft.
"No ifs, no buts, Wales must have fair funding," she said.
"We need clarity on this issue and the best way to tackle it head on is by entrenching it in the Wales Bill. People in Wales have waited long enough for this issue to be sorted out."
On the prospect of only a draft version of the Wales Bill being published by the autumn, Baroness Randerson said this was "simply not acceptable".
"Wales needs this Bill as soon as possible. People will be voting in the Welsh elections next year and they should be told the extent of powers the assembly will have.
"Likewise, the political parties need this clarity for when they write their manifestos." | Fair funding for Wales should be guaranteed by law, a former Lib Dem Wales Office minister has said. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The Sunday Times has reported the London Marathon was won seven times in 12 years by athletes who have recorded suspicious blood scores.
"We are disappointed when we have been doing more than anyone to fight doping in our sport," Bitel told BBC Sport.
"This is about the IAAF's failure to take effective action."
Bitel added that London Marathon organisers would be discussing the Sunday Times allegations with the IAAF.
The claims of widespread doping were made last week by scientists Robin Parisotto and Michael Ashenden, who analysed blood tests from athletes which were accessed by the Sunday Times and German broadcaster ARD/WDR.
But the IAAF has criticised the pair over the allegations and in a statement said the report "contains a number of seriously incorrect assertions".
On Friday, Russian Liliya Shobukhova, who won the London Marathon in 2010 and was runner-up in 2011, had her results since 2009 annulled for doping.
Bitel says race organisers will now be taking court action to recover £500,000 prize and appearance money paid to the Russian in 2010 and 2011.
"Those athletes that have been caught have only been caught because of tests at the London Marathon," he added.
"The IAAF needs to do more to stop people from starting who have blood values which are out of the normal range.
"But we never get these results even though we are paying tens of thousands to get athletes tested - only after the IAAF finally take action are we made aware, but by then it is too late."
In a statement, Bitel said that:
In response, an IAAF spokesman said, "All the marathon organisers had a thorough explanation of what the ABP (Athlete Biological Passport) was when the IAAF engaged in joint blood testing with them.
"They accepted from day one not to receive the results as they are not competent to act upon the values and the concept of the ABP is based on a series of values, not just a single value.
"In four years of co-operation they have never asked to see any results and they do not pay for all the testing." | London Marathon chief executive Nick Bitel has criticised athletics' governing body, the IAAF, over allegations of doping in the sport. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | The Home Affairs Select Committee said that only three boats were available to patrol 7,000 miles of shoreline.
Royal Navy vessels should be made available to plug any gaps, it said.
The Home Office says it makes use of radar and aerial surveillance and has ordered eight more boats.
The UK has a total of five Border Force vessels, but one has been deployed to the Mediterranean and another is in dock for maintenance.
The Border Force has been given a "key role in implementing strengthened coastal security measures", but it is "experiencing problems in gaining access to a sufficient number of patrol boats", the committee said.
Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairman of the committee, told BBC Radio 5 live: "The government has done the right thing in ordering more vessels but this should have been done much earlier and criminal gangs are not going to wait until order books have been fulfilled.
"They are making huge amounts of money and they are the ones we are going to be targeting - we need to ruthlessly deal with them."
The MPs also called for security to be stepped up at smaller ports, after the National Crime Agency warned earlier this year that they were being targeted by people smugglers.
The report also:
A Home Office spokeswoman said: "Our priority is to offer humanitarian support to those most in need while maintaining the security of our borders."
She said refuge had already been provided for more than 1,800 Syrians under the scheme, while the government was "on track" to deliver on its pledge to resettle 20,000 by the end of the Parliament.
On councils' role in resettlement, David Simmonds, of the Local Government Association, described the report as "out of date" and said: "We are confident that there will be sufficient places that will support the government's pledge to resettle 20,000 people by 2020."
Martyn Underhill, the police and crime commissioner for Dorset, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We are in a lot of trouble and I've been raising this with the government now for a year.
"Talk to the public and they will tell you they don't know who's coming in and out. We know that organised crime groups will always go for the weakest link and we know that Calais has been strengthened and they are starting to come in in other ways."
In May ministers announced measures to bolster maritime security, including new patrol boats for the Border Force to supplement the existing five-vessel fleet, but full deployment is not expected until the end of next year.
Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services union, said: "We have said for years that the Border Force doesn't have enough resources, but successive governments have continued to cut budgets and staff."
In May, 18 Albanians were rescued from a sinking inflatable boat off the Kent coast and in April two Iranian men were found floating in a dinghy in the English Channel.
Earlier this year, an ex-Border Force manager said Britain's coastal security was under threat from people smugglers because its fleet of patrol vessels was too small.
The Polish defending champion overcame Finals debutant Pliskova in 78 minutes.
French Open champion Garbine Muguruza avoided a whitewash at the event as she beat Svetlana Kuznetsova 3-6 6-0 6-1 in their dead rubber.
Russian Kuznetsova was already through as group winner with Muguruza out after defeats in her first two matches.
Find out how to get into tennis in our special guide.
Kuznetsova, who only qualified for the tournament with victory at the Kremlin Cup in Moscow on Saturday, will meet Slovak world number eight Dominika Cibulkova in Saturday's other semi-final.
Radwanska had match point in her group-stage defeat to Kuznetsova earlier this week and the world number three looked in good form as she racked up a seventh successive straight-sets win over Czech Pliskova.
"She is playing amazing tennis this year," Radwanska told BT Sport when asked about her meeting with Kerber.
"She has been on fire, playing unbelievable on every surface. I have nothing to lose and have to be 200% to beat her."
The busy schedule that Kuznetsova put herself through to qualify for the event appeared to catch up with the 31-year-old as she faded badly in defeat to Muguruza.
"To go to the limit, you need to push yourself hard, but I want to do that tomorrow," Kuznetsova said. | Britain's Border Force has a "worryingly low" number of boats to patrol the UK's coasts, MPs have said, amid concerns that coastal security is under threat from people smugglers.
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Agnieszka Radwanska will play world number one Angelique Kerber in the WTA Finals last four after beating Karolina Pliskova 7-5 6-3. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | Glenn Murray put the Seagulls in front from the penalty spot after Kalvin Phillips was sent off for handling on the line midway through the first half.
Despite dominating, the hosts only sealed victory with Tomer Hemed's late penalty after Lewis Dunk was fouled.
Leeds defended resolutely but rarely troubled the division's best defence.
Brighton, who go two points ahead of second-placed Newcastle, were top of the table at the same stage last season following a 21-game unbeaten run at the start of the campaign.
The Seagulls eventually missed out on automatic promotion to the Premier League, finishing third on goal difference behind Middlesbrough and champions Burnley.
However, Chris Hughton's men are now eight points clear of Reading in third, and three of their remaining four league games this month are against teams in the lower half of the division.
Their task against Leeds became easier when midfielder Phillips blocked Dunk's goalbound effort with his arm and Murray stepped up to smash home his 12th league goal of the season - all of which have come at home.
The striker, on loan from Bournemouth, had more opportunities in a one-sided first half, heading just wide and seeing his looping effort tipped over by visiting goalkeeper Rob Green.
Brighton were made to wait until the 83rd minute to add to their tally when Kyle Bartley tangled with fellow defender Dunk in the area - Israel striker Hemed sending Green the wrong way from the spot.
Fourth-placed Leeds had won five of their previous six Championship games before their visit to the south coast, but could drop out of the play-offs if results go against them on Saturday.
Brighton manager Chris Hughton:
"I am delighted with the result and the performance.
"The only negative was that there was too big a gap between the first goal and the second. Anything can happen and in that period we didn't create more opportunities.
"In the last four or five games we have not been at our best but we have kept picking up results."
Leeds boss Garry Monk:
"I'm frustrated. Brighton are a very good side but had we kept 11 men on the pitch it could have been different.
"Brighton deserved to win, but we didn't do ourselves justice.
"It was a tough night and we didn't make it easy for ourselves."
Match ends, Brighton and Hove Albion 2, Leeds United 0.
Second Half ends, Brighton and Hove Albion 2, Leeds United 0.
Foul by Oliver Norwood (Brighton and Hove Albion).
Ronaldo Vieira (Leeds United) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Attempt missed. Chris Wood (Leeds United) header from the right side of the six yard box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Stuart Dallas with a cross following a corner.
Corner, Leeds United. Conceded by Shane Duffy.
Attempt missed. Tomer Hemed (Brighton and Hove Albion) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Sam Baldock.
Foul by Jiri Skalak (Brighton and Hove Albion).
Charlie Taylor (Leeds United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Substitution, Leeds United. Liam Cooper replaces Pontus Jansson because of an injury.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Substitution, Brighton and Hove Albion. Jiri Skalak replaces Anthony Knockaert.
Delay in match Pontus Jansson (Leeds United) because of an injury.
Foul by Solly March (Brighton and Hove Albion).
Luke Ayling (Leeds United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Goal! Brighton and Hove Albion 2, Leeds United 0. Tomer Hemed (Brighton and Hove Albion) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the bottom right corner.
Penalty Brighton and Hove Albion. Lewis Dunk draws a foul in the penalty area.
Penalty conceded by Kyle Bartley (Leeds United) after a foul in the penalty area.
Kyle Bartley (Leeds United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Tomer Hemed (Brighton and Hove Albion) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Kyle Bartley (Leeds United).
Attempt saved. Shane Duffy (Brighton and Hove Albion) header from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Anthony Knockaert with a cross.
Dale Stephens (Brighton and Hove Albion) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Ronaldo Vieira (Leeds United).
Substitution, Brighton and Hove Albion. Tomer Hemed replaces Glenn Murray.
Corner, Brighton and Hove Albion. Conceded by Pontus Jansson.
Anthony Knockaert (Brighton and Hove Albion) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Ronaldo Vieira (Leeds United).
Substitution, Leeds United. Stuart Dallas replaces Souleymane Doukara.
Foul by Solly March (Brighton and Hove Albion).
Luke Ayling (Leeds United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Offside, Brighton and Hove Albion. Lewis Dunk tries a through ball, but Shane Duffy is caught offside.
Corner, Brighton and Hove Albion. Conceded by Pontus Jansson.
Attempt blocked. Anthony Knockaert (Brighton and Hove Albion) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Solly March.
Substitution, Brighton and Hove Albion. Solly March replaces Jamie Murphy because of an injury.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Delay in match Jamie Murphy (Brighton and Hove Albion) because of an injury.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Delay in match Anthony Knockaert (Brighton and Hove Albion) because of an injury.
Attempt missed. Jamie Murphy (Brighton and Hove Albion) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Anthony Knockaert with a cross. | Brighton moved top of the Championship and extended their unbeaten league run to 14 games with a win against 10-man Leeds United at the Amex Stadium. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | According to the local Boundary Commission, the number of seats will reduce from 18 to 17.
This is fewer than the two seat reduction initially proposed in 2011.
The change will have a knock-on impact on the future number of MLAs, which is being cut from six to five representatives per constituency in 2021.
If Northern Ireland has 17 constituencies that would mean the reduction in the number of MLAs will be from 108 to 85, not 90 as previously assumed.
A source said Labour chairman Hilary Benn had tried to "bounce" members into agreeing a 155-page report into the government's Brexit White Paper.
BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said the source had told her the report could not be allowed to stand.
The committee's press spokesman declined to comment on the claims.
According to the source, there had been no consultation on the committee's report - drawn up after a number of evidence sessions held in Parliament - before Mr Benn put it forward to a vote.
The report, which has yet to be published, was into the White Paper which sets out the themes of the government's goals for its negotiations with the EU.
These include:
The Exiting the European Union Committee was appointed by the House of Commons to scrutinise the expenditure, administration and policy of the Department for Exiting the European Union.
It has a 21-strong membership, made up of MPs from all parties, including Labour, the Conservatives - including ex-cabinet ministers Michael Gove and John Whittingdale - the Scottish National Party, Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru and the Democratic Unionist Party.
Mr Benn - a Remain supporter during the referendum - was elected to lead the new select committee last October, beating Leave campaigner and fellow Labour MP Kate Hoey to the job.
The role of select committees, which interview witnesses and produce reports to check the work of different areas of government, has increased in profile in recent years.
Committees are often split along party lines and in some cases have been known to publish "minority reports" where a faction disagree with the majority view on an issue.
It is not known yet whether those who disagree with the proposed report will produce their own one.
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Svein Arne Hansen said the 800m runner, who has served a two-year drugs ban, is welcome at the European Championships, which start in Amsterdam on Wednesday.
"With her brave statements and brave actions, she's really going out there to protect our sport," said Hansen.
Stepanova, 30, has also been cleared to run as a neutral at the Rio Olympics.
Stepanova was banned for two years in 2013 for doping offences but her revelations, along with those of husband Vitaly - a former drug-testing official - helped expose the doping problem in her country.
"Everyone in Russia is saying it makes no sense that Yuliya is eligible to compete," Vitaly said.
"But we never accused athletes, it was the system we accused."
The Russian athletics federation has been banned from international competition since November, after a World Anti-Doping Agency report - commissioned following claims made in a German TV documentary - found evidence of state-sponsored doping.
The documentary's claims of widespread wrongdoing stemmed principally from allegations made by Stepanova and her husband.
"She's very welcome because she's done a great job for the sport," Hansen added.
However, France's Renelle Lamote, this year's leading European woman over 800m, has not welcomed Stepanova's return to competition.
"I am against the fact that athletes who once doped can come back," she said.
"Whether they denounced the system or not, it's an injustice."
Vitaly does not think Stepanova, who has not competed since September 2015, is likely to produce a top performance in the Netherlands.
"She never stopped training. But she had not done the necessary training to run two minutes because she did not know she would be allowed to compete," he said.
"She also has had some minor injuries lately so she is not in great shape yet.
"I don't know what she will do but it is not about winning now, it's just about trying to compete, respecting the competition and not putting the result ahead of the rules.
"She is just happy to be able to compete again and whatever she can run, she will run." | A new review of the boundaries of Northern Ireland's parliamentary constituencies has begun.
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A number of Brexit-backing MPs walked out of a private meeting of the Commons Brexit Select Committee in protest at a report they claimed was "too gloomy".
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Russian doping whistleblower Yuliya Stepanova has been described as a "symbol" for clean competitors by the president of European Athletics. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Checkpoint Software found loopholes in the way four popular media players handle subtitles.
Poor checking of subtitle files, the different formats they use and problems with the websites that store the files all introduced weaknesses, it said.
Checkpoint said it had reported the bugs it found to media player makers.
The researchers found the bugs by analysing how the VLC, Kodi, Popcorn Time and Strem.io media players handle subtitle files. All four programs have been downloaded hundreds of millions of times, suggesting a large number of people are vulnerable, they said.
Attackers who exploited the vulnerabilities found in the subtitling ecosystem would more than likely be able to completely take over a PC, tablet or smart TV, said Checkpoint. Attackers could steal information, carry out denial of service attacks or install ransomware.
In a blog detailing the findings, the security firm said it was one of the "most widespread, easily accessed and zero-resistance vulnerability [sic] reported in recent years".
Typically, media players are programmed to automatically look online for files that can provide subtitles.
The players expect subtitle files to contain text only, so most do not look to see if anything malicious has been inserted instead, said the security firm.
In addition, the recommendation systems of the subtitle file stores could be manipulated, allowing attackers to ensure booby-trapped versions would be picked ahead of legitimate files, Checkpoint said.
The security problems are exacerbated by the large number of formats - more than 25 in total - used to prepare subtitle files. The media players tested by Checkpoint used many different methods of reading data from these formats, leaving them open to many different sorts of vulnerabilities.
"While the weakness doesn't appear to have been exploited in real-world attacks, that such a glaring problem exists under everyone's noses is wearying," wrote John Dunn, a security researcher at Sophos.
Mr Dunn advised people to update their media player software as quickly as possible.
"The next time you play a movie on any device, make sure cyber-criminals aren't playing you," he said.
All four makers of the media players Checkpoint analysed have produced updated versions that do a better job of policing subtitle files.
However, the safer versions are not being provided automatically, suggesting many media players will remain vulnerable for some time to come. | Film fans could be vulnerable to attack by hackers who hide malicious code inside files that provide subtitles, a security firm has warned. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The assaults took place over a two-year period when Michael Chase, 52, and wife Lara, 46, of Bathurst, Peterborough, were babysitting the girl.
Chase admitted the charges last year. His wife was found guilty this week.
Chase was given 14 years and his wife 13 years by Judge Sean Enright.
Peterborough Crown Court heard the couple sexually assaulted and took images of the girl while babysitting her between October 2012 and December 2014. She was 13 months old when the abuse began.
More on this and other stories from Cambridgeshire
They were "every parent's worst nightmare", Det Con Lloyd Metselaar, from Cambridgeshire Police, said.
"The appalling acts committed together by both Michael and Lara on such a young child who had been entrusted into their care, demonstrate the most serious breach of trust."
Michael Chase pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to two counts of sexually assaulting a child under 13; four of taking indecent photographs of a child; three of possessing indecent photographs of a child; possessing a prohibited image of a child; possessing an extreme pornographic image and making 4,524 indecent photographs of children.
Lara Chase pleaded not guilty to two counts of sexually assaulting a child under 13 and one count of distributing indecent photographs of a child, but was found guilty following a trial on 7 March.
During the trial she claimed she was unaware of her husband's paedophilia but a jury convicted her after hearing Chase had "assisted" her husband in the abuse. | A husband and wife have been jailed for sexually assaulting a 13-month-old toddler in what a judge described as the "worst abuse of a baby" he had ever seen. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | The completion of a cafe as part of the upgrade of the Wilton Lodge facility in Hawick has been affected.
However, it should still be ready by May this year - along with most of the other major infrastructure on the site.
Gordon Edgar of Scottish Borders Council said that while the delay was "disappointing" the cafe would still open for the "busy summer season".
A new bridge is expected to be put in place next month which will represent a "significant milestone" for the project.
Most of the new facilities will be in place almost a year ahead of the overall project completion date of April 2018. | A delay in part of a £3.65m park overhaul in the Borders has been blamed on "drainage and design issues". |
Can you summarize this content? | Large amounts of young roach and other species of fish were found floating on the surface of Pittville Park's lake in Cheltenham.
Park owner Cheltenham Borough Council said low oxygen levels were to blame, with one possible cause being recent storms stirring up the sediment.
Fishing on the lake has been banned until further notice.
The Environment Agency is re-circulating water into the lake in an effort to stabilize oxygen levels.
An agency spokesperson said at least 25,000 fish had been killed.
Janice Peacey, a community ranger, said: "Low oxygen levels could be due to a number of factors linked to environmental conditions such as decomposing algae or sediment stirred up by recent storms.
"The surviving fish now have areas which are oxygenated and we will continue to work with the Environment Agency to make sure that oxygen levels stay at the required level.
"We would also like to remind people that, as always, we would advise against people and pets swimming and paddling in unsupervised, open water."
The authority added that the Environment Agency had ruled out blue-green algae, which can be hazardous.
Pittville Park opened in 1825 and is the largest ornamental park in the town.
The 42-year-old Munster head coach died suddenly in Paris on Saturday ahead of a European Champions Cup game.
It is a reciprocal gesture following the death of Ulster player Nevin Spence in 2012.
Munster erected a plaque commemorating Spence at Thomond Park, their home ground in Limerick.
It has not been confirmed what form of memorial will be made by Ulster.
"Anthony Foley was a magnificent rugby player and a magnificent human being," said Ulster CEO Shane Logan.
"We extend our condolences to his family and all in Munster rugby.
"Munster were superb when Nevin Spence died - they did us the great tribute of placing a permanent memorial to Nevin in their away changing room.
"We would like to reciprocate for Munster."
Munster's European Champions Cup game against Racing 92 was postponed following the former Ireland international's death.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Foley captained Munster to Heineken Cup success in 2006 and won 62 caps for Ireland.
He was forwards coach with Munster, and for a short period in 2012 with Ireland, before becoming head coach of the Irish province in 2014.
Ulster director of rugby Les Kiss worked with Foley during their respective backroom stints with the Ireland squad.
"It's a hard thing to sink in. Axel Foley, a legend of Munster and Irish rugby," said Kiss.
"A good friend and great coach. I loved working with him. To think I'm not going to see you again is surreal. I can't believe it."
Ulster centre Spence was just 22 when he died in a farming accident along with his father and brother. | Recent storms could be to blame for the death of thousands of fish in an ornamental lake in Gloucestershire.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Ulster Rugby have announced that they will erect a memorial to Anthony Foley in the away changing room at Kingspan Stadium. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Judge Mario Carroza said investigators had found that Gen Alberto Bachelet died of heart problems aggravated by torture sessions after his arrest.
Gen Bachelet was loyal to President Salvador Allende, who was deposed in the coup led by Gen Augusto Pinochet.
Ms Bachelet, who was tortured herself, was Chile's president in 2006-2010.
Judge Carroza was assigned to review a complaint brought by relatives of the victims of military rule alleging that Gen Bachelet had been tortured to death.
He said a new forensic study concluded that "all the interrogations to which Gen Bachelet was submitted damaged his heart and was the likely cause of death".
Soon after the coup on 11 September 1973, the 51-year-old general was taken to a military academy, where he was questioned by members of the armed force he had previously led.
He died on 12 March 1974 while serving a sentence for treason in the capital Santiago.
His wife, Angela Jeria, and his daughter Michelle were also held and tortured before fleeing to Australia.
Michelle Bachelet now heads the UN women's agency.
Judge Carroza has also been in charge of an investigating into the death of Mr Allende.
A team of international experts concluded that Chile's first democratically elected Socialist president killed himself during the coup.
Mr Allende's family had always accepted he had committed suicide, but some of his supporters suspected he had been killed by soldiers. | The father of former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet probably died as a result of torture after the 1973 military coup, a judge has said. |
Summarize the provided section. | GAW Miners and ZenMiner are accused of selling shares worth $20m (£13.3m) in mining hardware called Hashlets.
Bitcoins are "mined" when computers solve equations that verify user transactions made with the currency.
But it is claimed that Hashlets did not have enough processing power to carry out the number of verifications required to properly reward investors.
GAW and ZenMiner were owned by Homero Joshua Garza, who has been charged in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) complaint filed in a federal court in Connecticut.
"As alleged in our complaint, Garza and his companies cloaked their scheme in technological sophistication and jargon, but the fraud was simple at its core: they sold what they did not own, misrepresented what they were selling, and robbed one investor to pay another," said Paul Levenson, director of the SEC's Boston regional office.
The SEC has alleged that Mr Garza's companies were engaged in what's known as a Ponzi scheme, in which investors were owed more than the mining machines were able to make and pay out to them each day.
As a result, it is claimed that most were never able to recoup the value of their initial investments, while a few made some profit.
Mr Garza was said to be "disappointed" by the charges, according to a statement from his lawyer, Marjorie Peerce,
Any further comments, she added, would be made through the court process.
Generally, fraud in the Bitcoin world is on the increase, according to Richard Howlett, a partner at London law firm Selachii, which advises clients on legal issues relating to crypto-currencies.
"There are several high-profile Bitcoin exchanges I am aware of which appear to be Ponzi schemes," he said.
Mr Howlett added that Bitcoin users sometimes also encountered difficulties when trying to retrieve currency stored in online "exchanges" - a bit like personal banks for Bitcoins.
On occasion, a rogue exchange might shut down overnight and claim it was hacked, said Mr Howlett. Those running the exchange would then disappear with the clients' funds.
Since 2014, Mr Howlett's firm has been contacted by more than 1,000 people affected by rogue exchanges and mining companies.
"Until the industry is regulated, this pattern will continue to increase," he added. | Two US Bitcoin mining firms have been charged with running a scheme that duped more than 10,000 investors. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | But its board has called for an independent review "into Scottish football's actions and processes".
It had taken legal advice after the Supreme Court ruled this month against the club over its use of employee benefit trusts from 2001 to 2010.
"No further disciplinary proceedings will be taken," it said in a statement.
"The SPFL board further announced that it supports the calls that have been made for an independent review concerning the way in which Scottish football's authorities have dealt with non-payment of tax by clubs, have applied their rules and regulations, and the sufficiency of changes made to their rules and regulations in this area over the last few years."
A 2013 Scottish Premier League commission had found that Rangers were in breach of player registration rules during the EBT period.
Headed by Lord Nimmo-Smith, the commission fined the Ibrox club £250,000 but resisted calls for them to be stripped of titles won during that period.
However, following the Supreme Court ruling in favour of HM Revenue and Customs, Celtic said they expected the SPFL to review the 2013 decision that their city rivals "did not gain any unfair competitive advantage".
However, the governing body revealed that its senior counsel, Gerry Moynihan QC, had concluded that the case against Rangers in relation to EBTs was "now closed and cannot be re-opened by the SPFL. Nor can the commission or a new commission now impose further or different sanctions".
"The SPFL has no power in law to re-open these issues and the commission has no power in law, assuming it wished to do so, to modify or supplement the sanction previously imposed," it stated.
Moynihan also concluded that there was nothing in the rules of regulations of the SPL, or its SPFL predecessor, that would have allowed the governing body to pursue the matter further.
The SPFL pointed out that, since 2010, it "has brought in a number of rule changes dealing with non-payment of tax. These were further bolstered at Monday's SPFL annual general meeting".
Moynihan's advice to the governing body, the detailed questions it had asked and his answers have been published on its official website.
SPFL chairman Ralph Topping recognised the clamour for further action.
"The board of the SPFL has noted the calls that have been made for an independent review and report concerning the way in which Scottish football's authorities have dealt with non-payment of tax by clubs, application of their rules and regulations and the sufficiency of changes made to their rules and regulations in this area over the last few years," he said.
"The board of the SPFL supports those calls for such an independent review and will seek to facilitate such review and the publication of its report with and to the Scottish FA.
"The SPFL will seek to agree terms of reference with the Scottish FA and the identification of appropriate independent reviewers."
Favourites Australia outscored the Black Ferns four tries to three, with two of those coming while New Zealand's Portia Woodman was in the sin bin.
Meanwhile, Britain's women missed out on Olympic medal as they lost 33-10.
"If we've inspired any girls to take up rugby, we've done our job," said GB captain Emily Scarratt.
Britain, beaten 25-7 by New Zealand in the last four earlier on Monday, trailed 26-5 at half-time.
Canada, who had lost to Britain in earlier pool game, took full advantage of Scarratt's yellow card for a deliberate knock on.
Tries by Jasmine Joyce and Danielle Waterman were little consolation, as third seeds Canada put in a physical performance, dominating at the breakdown.
The men's competition begins on Tuesday, with Australia facing France at 15:00 BST. GB's men begin their bid for a medal against Kenya an hour later.
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As well as having a bet on your favourite horse, give yourself another chance by pooling together work colleagues, or a combination of family and friends, and having a lucky dip.
The field was reduced from 40 to 39 on Saturday morning after O'Faolains Boy, trained by Rebecca Curtis, was found to be lame and withdrawn from the race.
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Most devices will open PDF documents automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader. Users of the BBC Sport app should access this via their web browser. | The Scottish Professional Football League says it cannot impose fresh sanctions on Rangers over the club's use of a controversial tax scheme.
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Australia's women beat New Zealand 24-17 to win the first ever Olympic rugby sevens gold medal, after Great Britain lost to Canada for bronze.
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Saturday's Grand National at Aintree simply wouldn't be the same without a sweepstake. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Opposition protesters were dispersed from outside the commission's offices in Accra by police firing tear gas.
The NPP said in a statement that the National Democratic Congress had stolen votes across the country.
NDC candidate President John Mahama had a narrow lead over NPP rival Nana Akufo-Addo, according to local media.
Joy FM said based on partial results Mr Mahama looked likely to gain more than 50% of the vote, which would give him overall victory without needing a run-off vote.
Ghana, one of the world's fastest growing economies, is regarded as one of Africa's most stable democracies.
Mr Akufo-Addo lost the 2008 presidential poll by one percentage point, but accepted the result.
However, his party said they had "enough concrete evidence" to prove that he actually won this year's election.
"The ruling NDC conspired with certain EC staff in constituencies across the country to falsify the election results and thereby abuse the mandate of the people of Ghana," the party said.
"It was this planned, systematic stealing of votes at the collation level that was, thankfully, discovered in time."
The party cited discrepancies between initial tally sheets and the results reported in the media.
It said thousands of votes had been stolen from Mr Akufo-Addo and added to Mr Mahama's tally.
The opposition demanded an inquiry before official results are released.
Election commissioner Kwadwo Afari-Gyan told Reuters news agency he was not yet aware of the NPP complaint.
The NDC has not yet responded to the allegations.
Observers said Friday's vote, for a new president and parliament, passed off in a largely peaceful manner.
Some glitches with a new finger-printing system meant that voting continued into Saturday in some parts of the country.
The turnout was reported to be high, at roughly 80%.
As a top exporter of cocoa and gold, Ghana is one of the world's fastest-growing economies.
In 2011 it saw economic growth of 14% and experts predict growth of 8% for 2012 and in 2013.
There should be a guarantee that students from NI will not have to pay non-EU fees when the UK leaves the EU, said Fianna Fáil's Thomas Byrne.
The Republic's student contribution fee is currently capped at 3,000 euros (£2,500) a year for EU students.
But non-EU students currently pay much higher tuition fees in the country.
For instance, University College Dublin and Trinity College Dublin charge yearly fees of around 18,000 euros for many undergraduate courses.
Some medical degrees can attract much higher fees, of around 40,000 euros per year.
Brexit was causing a great deal of worry for students and their families, said Mr Byrne, Fianna Fáil's education spokesman.
"The minister for education and the government need to act on this and provide certainty on the issue of fees for Northern students coming south," he said.
"They should be treated the same as they are today.
"Non-EU fees are charged at a significantly higher rate than EU fees and will undoubtedly place a significant financial barrier in the path of students from Northern Ireland wishing to study south of the border."
"This would fly in the face of the letter and spirit of our various peace deals and the last two decades of cross-border work."
Students from the UK - including those from Northern Ireland - who begin university courses in the Republic of Ireland in September 2017 will not have to pay non-EU fees for the duration of their course.
The same guarantee is likely to apply to students beginning their courses in September 2018.
However, it is currently unclear which level of fees UK students who begin to study in the Republic in 2019 will have to pay.
According to figures supplied by the Republic's Higher Education Authority, only 0.4% of full-time students were from NI in 2015/16, a total of 791 students.
This is despite the fact that university undergraduate tuition fees in the Republic are currently lower at 3,000 euros a year compared to £3,805 in NI.
However, there has been a recent rise in the number of Northern Irish students applying to some universities in the Republic. | Ghana's opposition New Patriotic Party has accused the governing party of conspiring with Electoral Commission staff to fix Friday's election.
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Northern Irish students should not have to pay more to attend universities in the Republic after Brexit, an Irish opposition politician has argued. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The drone was handed over some 92km north-west of Subic Bay in the Philippines, officials said.
China seized the vehicle in international waters, in one of the most serious confrontations between the powers in decades.
The US said it would continue to "fly, sail, and operate in the South China Sea" where international law allows.
"After friendly consultations between the Chinese and US sides, the handover was smoothly completed at midday," China's defence ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.
The Pentagon described the incident as inconsistent with international law and codes of conduct between navies at sea, and added that it would continue to investigate.
A Chinese Navy ship seized the drone 92km (57 miles) north-west of Subic Bay near the Philippines in the South China Sea on Thursday.
According to the Pentagon, the drone, known as an unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), was being used to carry out scientific research at the time it was captured.
China's defence ministry said in a statement that the craft was retrieved and examined to maintain the safety of passing vessels.
Although an agreement on the return of the drone was eventually reached, it did not come before sharp exchanges and a formal diplomatic complaint by the US.
US President-elect Donald Trump earlier accused the Chinese of "stealing".
"We should tell China that we don't want the drone they stole back - let them keep it!" he tweeted.
China's defence ministry later said that the vessel would be returned in an "appropriate manner", calling the US response "unhelpful".
Analysts believe this is likely to stoke US concerns about the growing military build-up by China in the South China Sea.
China has claimed territorial rights over most of the South China Sea but its claims are disputed by several nations.
China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei all have competing claims.
China has backed its expansive claims with island-building and naval patrols. The US says it does not take sides in territorial disputes, but has sent military ships and planes near disputed islands, calling them "freedom of navigation" operations to ensure access to key shipping and air routes.
Both sides have accused each other of "militarising" the South China Sea.
The Philippines called the drone incident, which took place inside its exclusive economic zone, "very troubling" saying it increased the likelihood of "miscalculations that could lead to open confrontation" very near the Philippine mainland.
Relations between the US and China have been growing increasingly tense, with Mr Trump inflaming the Chinese by speaking on the phone earlier this month with the leader of Taiwan, breaking a long-standing US practice.
China has so far been restrained in its official responses to Mr Trump, choosing instead to stress the importance of Sino-US ties.
There were "friendly consultations" about the fate of a drone that was taken because China said it may have posed a threat to vessels around it.
Beijing had earlier claimed it simply treated it like something you might "find in the street". Or is that just diplomatic gloss?
Was it instead what the Pentagon described as the return of a piece of US kit "unlawfully seized" while it was in international waters "in full compliance with international law"?
The US says it will "continue to investigate" the events surrounding the seizure. Five days is more than enough time to have a good look inside a piece of hardware that your rival may be using to track your submarines.
As the clock ticks towards the arrival of President Trump tensions are escalating, with both sides choosing different ways to send a message to the other. | A US underwater drone seized by the Chinese navy in the contentious South China Sea has now been returned. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | A post-mortem examination of the woman's body, found at a house in Curlew Place, St Neots, concluded she died from "multiple cuts to the neck".
Armed officers forced entry after being contacted by an ambulance crew and found a woman in her 30s, police said.
Timothy Allen, 40, from Curlew Place, is due to appear at Peterborough Magistrates' Court on Wednesday.
The house remains cordoned off and inquiries continue, police said.
The figure is double what is currently being provided.
Undertaking such a programme would cost £700m a year, experts commissioned to look into the issue found.
Housing charity Shelter has urged all political parties to pledge to meet the 12,000 homes target in their Holyrood election manifestos.
The Scottish government currently has a target of building 6,000 affordable homes per year.
A report - Affordable Housing Need in Scotland - was carried out by a team from the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research at Sheffield Hallam, Sheffield University and the University of St Andrews.
It was commissioned by Shelter Scotland, the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH) Scotland and the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations (SFHA).
The independent report - which claims to be the first in-depth investigation into Scotland's total housing need for 10 years - calls for the biggest house building programme since the 1970s.
The Scottish government is to consider the report but said it is "already delivering a huge boost to affordable housing provision", with 30,000 properties to be completed by the end of the life of the current parliament in 2016.
Graeme Brown, director of Shelter Scotland, said: "The 12,000-a-year target for new affordable homes is the minimum level required to tackle Scotland's housing crisis.
"We are calling on all political parties in Scotland to acknowledge there is a crisis by making the building of new affordable homes a priority in their manifestos for the forthcoming Holyrood elections and use the 12,000 target as a benchmark for their ambitions.
"Politics is about making choices and we have simply got to do more to reduce homelessness in Scotland."
SFHA chief executive Mary Taylor said: "The research provides evidence of the scale of need. Scottish ministers are already considering recommendations from the subsidy review group earlier this summer which showed a need for increased subsidy."
A Scottish government spokeswoman said: "We are working closely with all sectors to promote the construction of new homes, support jobs in the construction industry and inclusive growth in the wider economy."
The pets are all thought to have been poisoned on the Hambleton estate in Thirsk between February and April.
North Yorkshire Police is jointly investigating the deaths with the RSPCA.
Cat owners in the area are being urged to be vigilant to any changes in their pets' behaviour and to check garages and gardens for any spillages.
PC Clare Mayes said: "If your cat appears to be lethargic or unsteady on their feet, you need to seek urgent veterinary assistance.
"The sooner your pet receives treatment, the better their chances of survival."
Trew will also meet another potential buyer, who flies in from China on Tuesday, while local businessman Alan Hardy has made a formal written offer to buy the League Two club.
Hardy is the chief executive of the Paragon Group, and owns the Nottinghamshire Golf and Country Club.
But the agreement with the US company appears to have scuppered his chances.
Trew announced last month that he was looking to sell the League Two club after his family were subjected to "foul and mindless abuse".
But he is understood to consider that Hardy's bid - which is reportedly between £8m and £10m - is way short of his valuation.
Hardy had insisted any agreement includes a clause that sees Trew settle any undisclosed debts and liabilities.
HM Revenue & Customs has issued a winding-up petition against the club, with the case adjourned until 25 April. | A man has been charged with murder after a woman was found dead in Cambridgeshire on Saturday.
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At least 12,000 affordable homes need to be built in Scotland each year for the next five years, according to three leading housing organisations.
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Five cats have died in a spate of suspected anti-freeze attacks in a North Yorkshire town.
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Notts County owner Ray Trew has agreed a deal to sell the club to an American company, BBC Radio Nottingham reports. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Becky Hill featured on Gecko, with club DJ Oliver Heldens, which charted in June.
The 20-year-old never won The Voice but says being on the show has been "no hindrance" to her career.
Two years after getting to the semi-finals she is now releasing her first solo single, Losing.
"It doesn't matter how well that song does, whether it's number one or number 100. I'm so proud of that track," she tells Newsbeat.
"It explains more than what it's about. It's about my meeting with [DJ/singer] MNEK, my friendship circle in London, me being signed, my adventures.
"They all spurred off from losing and if it does really well in the charts then bonus."
Since appearing on The Voice in 2012, Becky has been on tour with Rudimental and had another top 10 hit with Wilkinson on his track Afterglow.
For those songs by Rudimental, Wilkinson and Oliver Heldens, she's been the "featured" artist.
On her future gigs, she doesn't know whether those tracks will be put in her set.
"By the time I'm doing an hour-long set I'll have had an album out.
"People remember you for the good music you make, not for the other good music you had. So as long as I make good music then people will remember me for that, not for the features I've been on."
She denies that being a featured artist will have any negative effect on her solo career as it goes forward.
"You could have said the same about The Voice," she says. "The Voice hasn't been a hindrance to me at all."
First gig I went to: It was James Morrison when I was 14 in Birmingham. He was amazing and I was at the back singing all the words annoying everyone around me.
First song that had an impact: JoJo's Leave (Get Out) was the first song I sang publicly when I was 11. It is such a tune.
Guilty pleasure: Anything that's really cheesy pop music.
First gig I ever did: I did our local festival in Worcestershire called ArleyFest. About 500 people went and there were artists on the bill I'd never heard of before.
Biggest gig to date: I played MTV Malta with Rudimental and there were about 50-thousand people.
Artist I'd love to support: My music is nothing like theirs so I wouldn't be picked as a support. It's Bon Iver. His voice, his writing, his production, his leftfield approach to things , I just love him.
First album I bought: Elephunk by the Black Eyed Peas
Song that annoys me: Oh what's that song about wanting to marry the girl but the dad that won't let him? (When told it's 'Rude' by Magic!) That stupid tune.
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Toffees boss Roberto Martinez said the 25-year-old would be a success in England after he scored in Kiev's Europa League win over Everton.
Club officials travelled to Monaco to discuss the transfer with their Kiev counterparts this week.
Martinez is also pursuing a £5m deal for River Plate's Argentine central defender Ramiro Funes Mori, 24.
The signing of Mori would be as an addition to their resources rather than a potential replacement for England's John Stones, who they insist will not be sold after rejecting a £30m offer from Chelsea.
Everton are unbeaten after two Premier League matches this season and entertain Manchester City on Sunday. | She's the only contestant from The Voice to have had a number one single after appearing on the show.
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Everton are in talks with Dynamo Kiev to sign Ukraine forward Andriy Yarmolenko for around £14.25m. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The National Childbirth Trust said one in 10 mothers experienced post-natal depression but too often there was "no care, or very little care".
It said just 3% of clinical commissioning groups had a peri-natal mental health strategy in place.
Its research was based on freedom of information requests to 194 CCGs.
Of those CCGs with no strategy in place, 60% said they had no plans to establish one.
National Childbirth Trust (NCT) chief executive Belinda Phipps said: "While we found some areas with excellent care, too often we have found situations where there is no care, or very little care.
"If there are whole areas where GPs, midwives and health visitors have no training or time to dedicate to this vital service then women will not get the help and support they need.
"For many parents this will result in months of misery, damaging both family relations and children's well-being.
"And, in the most extreme circumstances, it will result in tragedy and loss of life."
Ms Phipps said there was an urgent need for properly staffed and resourced services with clear lines of responsibility and clear targets for delivery.
The charity said 15% of CCGs did not provide any information in response to its request and instead directed it to local NHS trusts or NHS England.
It said this suggested a lack of clarity over where responsibility lay for commissioning and providing services.
CCGs were set up in 2012 to give GPs and other NHS clinicians influence over local commissioning decisions.
They include all GP groups in their geographical area and are overseen by NHS England.
NHS England's national clinical director for maternity and women's health, Dr Catherine Calderwood, said: "Postnatal depression is a very lonely and distressing experience and it is important that women suffering from it receive the support and treatment they need.
"While across the country there are many good examples of high quality support for postnatal depression, the level of service is still too varied and local commissioners need to ensure that the support they provide for women meets the highest standards."
The NCT also asked 193 NHS trusts if they provided a peri-natal mental health service with trained specialists.
More than half - 54% - said they did not offer any such service and a further 17% did not respond to the request.
The charity said only 13% of trusts had a full team of such specialists in place. A further 14% employed one such specialist, often on a part-time basis. | There are "huge gaps" in support and care for the mental health of new mothers by the NHS in England, a parenting charity has said. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | Daniel, four, was starved and beaten for months before he died in March 2012 at his Coventry home. His mother and her partner were jailed for his murder.
Dr Mohammad Pathan did not provide a "safety net" when teachers raised concerns over Daniel's appearance and weight.
He was found guilty of misconduct last month but remains fit to practise.
The Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service said the warning, imposed on Wednesday, would last for five years.
The panel ruled: "On 25 January 2012 the deputy head teacher of Patient A [Daniel] telephoned you to raise concerns regarding Patient A's loss of weight, appearance and behaviour concerning food.
"Following receipt of the telephone call you failed to act adequately and attach sufficient weight to the information provided during the telephone call and you also failed to take adequate account of other information available to you, including Patient A not attending for some or all of follow-up treatment for a fractured humerus.
"By doing so you failed to put in place a 'safety net' to safeguard the interests of a child at risk."
Dr Pathan had denied he was aware of some concerns.
Daniel's mother Magdelena Luczak and her partner Mariusz Krezolek were jailed for a minimum of 30 years each in 2013.
Isa Huso was a member of the Supreme Kurdish Council, aimed at bringing together Syrian Kurdish groups, and an opponent of President Bashar al-Assad.
Syria's main Kurdish militia later issued a call to arms to all Kurds to fight jihadists operating in the north.
It follows weeks of intense fighting between Kurds and jihadist groups.
Mr Huso was leaving his home in the border town when a bomb planted inside his car detonated, Kurdish political sources told Reuters news agency.
He was a member of the foreign relations committee in the Kurdish council, an umbrella group for regional Kurdish factions.
Isa Huso, 60, was described by Kurdish activists as a moderate.
He had reportedly been imprisoned several times under Mr Assad's rule for campaigning against human rights abuses.
"Huso sought to promote Kurdish rights within a united Syria free from the grip of the Assad regime," his former neighbour, Massoud Akko, told Reuters news agency.
"No-one knows who killed him but the fingers point to the militant Islamists. They are the only ones who are targeting Kurds as Kurds," he added.
Responding to Huso's killing, Kurdish fighters known as the Popular Protection Units (YPG) issued a call to arms.
"(The YPG) called on all those fit to carry weapons to join their ranks, to protect areas under their control from attacks by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) fighters, Al-Nusra Front and other battalions," a London-based Syria watchdog, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said.
The YPG, which claims to have no political affiliations, was set up to counter offensives in majority Kurdish areas.
In recent months it has been battling to drive out rebels from the north, including the al-Qaeda affiliated Al-Nusra Front.
Areas near the Turkish border have seen some of the most intense fighting, with clashes reported between the Kurdish Democratic Union Party and the Al-Nusra Front in the town of Ras al-Ain.
Syria's ethnic Kurdish minority has faced decades of discrimination and marginalisation under Assad rule, with Syrian Kurds staging their own anti-government protests after the Syria conflict began in March 2011.
Responding to a wave of protests in 2011, the Assad administration decreed a number of concessions, granting Kurds in the eastern Hasaka region Syrian nationality.
In mid-2012, Assad's forces withdrew from majority Kurdish areas, leaving Kurdish militia in charge of security there.
The Kurds make up a little over 10% of the population and are largely concentrated in north-eastern Syria, towards the Turkish border. | A GP has been given a warning for not acting adequately over concerns raised about starved schoolboy Daniel Pelka.
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A prominent Syrian Kurdish politician has been killed in a car bomb attack in Syria's north-eastern town of Qamishli, near the Turkish border, officials say. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The attack took place in the Sabaa al-Bour area, about 30km (20 miles) north of Baghdad.
At least 25 people were wounded in the attack, which targeted evening prayers.
There has been a surge in sectarian attacks in recent months on targets like mosques, restaurants and local markets.
The suicide bombing came after three other attacks in the north of Iraq killed a further nine people.
The violence has rekindled fears the country is being dragged towards a wider conflict between the Shia majority and the Sunni minority.
Sunnis have accused the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of discriminating against them - a claim the government denies.
Last month was the bloodiest in Iraq since June 2008, with 1,045 civilians and security officials killed. | A suicide bomber has killed at least 14 people in an attack on a Shia mosque near the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, officials say. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | The EU does not allow state support of a business if it would distort competition in the single market.
The final decision on whether state aid is allowed is down to the European Commission.
It applies rules agreed by every country in the EU.
But the steel industry is a special case.
Because the European Union already produces more steel than it needs, the member states of the EU agreed to allow uneconomical producers to go bust, rather than let governments save them.
So that is the first question for Port Talbot and the other parts of Tata Steel UK - can they survive on their own? If they can't then the government's hands are tied.
There are some ways round the rules.
The first is national security. Under the 1957 Treaty of Rome, one of the founding treaties of the EU, countries can "take any measures necessary" if an industry is essential to national security.
This is supposed to refer to arms, munitions and "war material". Does it apply to hot rolled steel? Legal experts think it's unlikely, although Lord West, the former First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff has told the BBC that UK production is vital for the defence sector.
The second is a move to avoid "a serious disturbance to the economy". This was one of the arguments used to justify the bank bailouts.
It might also be used to justify aid to the Greek banking system.
But the loss of 15,000 UK jobs - or even 40,000 UK and European jobs - may simply not be considered a serious enough disturbance by the European Commission to justify a government handout.
The last option isn't state aid at all. A government can own a company under state aid rules but it is not allowed to keep it going if it would otherwise fail.
This is the closest the government can come to "nationalisation".
If the government can convince the European Commission that buying a business is a sensible move that any investor would make for a profit then it is not classified as state aid.
However with Port Talbot reportedly losing £1 million a day this may be a tough sell.
State aid is not banned in the European Union, but it is tightly controlled, and in 2008 the banks met the necessary criteria for a bailout.
As well as being vital for the stability of the economy, it was generally accepted that the UK banking sector had a profitable future.
The aim of the EU state aid rules is to ensure any government intervention produces a sustainable independent industry.
As far as the rules are concerned, it is hard to make that argument for the UK steel industry.
However, in the coming weeks many people will be doing just that, and adding that it is the government's role to provide a bridge - of some sort - to a sustainable future for UK steel. | The UK government has said it will consider helping Port Talbot steelworks - but any intervention risks falling foul of European Union state aid rules. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Protesters are calling for a referendum to repeal the laws in the mainly Catholic country.
Across Twitter #repealthe8th hashtag was popular among supporters, referring to the 8th amendment of the Irish constitution that forbids abortion.
Abortion is only legal in Ireland if the mother's life it at risk.
Marching in the rain, protesters in Dublin chanted, "My body, my choice".
Sal Roche, a 42-year-old dance teacher participating in the march, told Reuters news agency: "It's a woman's right to choose and it is ridiculous to say that anybody else, the state or the Church, has the right to tell that woman what happens to her body."
The Irish diaspora organised support for the movement across world cities including Berlin, Melbourne, and London.
Irish comedian Graham Linehan tweeted in support of the demonstrations.
Abortion has been a contentious issue in Ireland with people protesting on both sides of the debate. A total ban on the practice was removed in 2013.
Opponents say the 8th constitutional amendment protects a mother's and an unborn child's equal right to life.
Next month Prime Minister Enda Kenny will hold a citizens' assembly to discuss whether a vote should take place to change the abortion laws.
It expects to make an operating profit of 7.2 trillion won ($7.1bn; £4.2bn) in the April-to-June period, down from 9.5 trillion won a year ago.
Its operating profit has now fallen for three straight quarters.
Samsung is the world's biggest maker of mobile phones and the handset division accounts for the bulk of its profits.
The South Korean firm said it "witnessed a slowdown in the overall smartphone market growth and saw increased competition in the Chinese and some European markets" during the period.
Meanwhile, a stronger Korean currency also hurt Samsung's earnings during the period.
The Korean won rose more than 11% against the US dollar and nearly 7% against the euro between July 2013 and end of June this year.
A strengthening currency hurts profits of firms such as Samsung - which rely heavily on exports - when they repatriate their foreign earnings.
Samsung's growth in recent years has been powered mainly by its mobile phone division.
The success of its Galaxy range of smartphones, coupled with a growing global demand for such gadgets, saw it displace Nokia as the world's biggest mobile phone maker in 2012.
However, the pace of growth of the smartphone market has been slowing down and the competition in the sector has also increased, forcing manufacturers to cut costs of their devices in an attempt to attract consumers.
Analysts said that profit margins in the sector are likely to fall even further.
"The golden era of high-end smartphones is clearly over. Those were the handsets that helped firms such as Samsung make healthy profit margins," Ajay Sunder, a vice president specialising in the telecoms sector with consulting firm Frost & Sullivan, told the BBC.
"Now it is all about high-volume and low-margin handsets. And on that front the competition is getting fiercer with each passing day."
Various other smartphone makers including China's Xiaomi, Huawei and ZTE have been increasing their market share steadily.
Mr Sunder said that given the slowing growth and increased competition in the smartphone market, Samsung needed to look at boosting its presence in other sectors if it wanted to sustain high growth rates.
"Its over-dependence on the mobile phone division needs to go," he said.
For its part, Samsung has said it "cautiously expects a more positive outlook in the third quarter". | Thousands of people have marched across Dublin and 20 other world cities to protest against Ireland's strict abortion laws.
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Samsung Electronics has forecast a 25% drop in profit for the second quarter due to a slowdown in the smartphone market and a strong Korean currency. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | The Victorian Society has published its annual list of the most at-risk Victorian and Edwardian buildings in England and Wales.
The old Bute Road Station, in Cardiff Bay, is the only Welsh building on it.
Actor and Victorian Society vice-president Griff Rhys Jones called for locals to campaign to save them.
The building is thought to have been designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel and was built as the headquarters of the Taff Vale Railway in 1842-43.
It became home to the first steam-powered railway in Wales and played a vital role in linking the coalfields of the south Wales valleys with Cardiff Docks.
But the building has been derelict since a museum it housed closed, with train passengers now using a temporary shelter at the adjacent Cardiff Bay station.
Christopher Costelloe, director of the Victorian Society, said he hoped there was a way to bring the building "back into use and provide a fitting gateway to the area".
"Retaining historic buildings like those in the top ten is vital to maintaining local identity and creating places in which people want to invest, live and work," he added.
Another building in the city, The Coal Exchange - where the first million pound cheque was signed - was included on the list two years ago.
Following a campaign to save it, developer Signature Living was granted permission to start restoring the site as a hotel.
Other buildings to make this year's list include Victoria Mill in Grimsby, Lincolnshire, St Paul's Church in Boughton, Cheshire, and the Old Library in Stafford, Staffordshire.
For the first time, there are no buildings in London and England's south east region on the list.
George Elwood Tschaggeny, 51, was found wearing the wedding ring of one of the victims, Ricky Best, police say.
Mr Best, 53, was killed when he intervened to protect two young women from anti-Muslim abuse last week.
His ring and backpack were stolen after the stabbing on Tuesday.
Mr Tschaggeny has been charged with theft, tampering with evidence, and abuse of a corpse. He is due in court on Monday.
Mr Best, an army veteran, and Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, 23, have been hailed as heroes for their actions.
The pair intervened to protect two young women, one of whom was wearing a hijab, from a man shouting abuse at them.
Jeremy Joseph Christian, 35, is accused of stabbing both men, as well as another victim who survived.
The news that someone had stolen belongings from Mr Best prompted an outcry and an appeal from police to help recovering the items.
Police department spokesman Pete Simpson had tweeted: "Find this man Portland. This family has already suffered too much pain."
Police said they received "numerous tips" about a man matching the suspect's description, including one from a pizza restaurant employee who directed them to where he was staying.
Police also recovered Mr Best's missing backpack, but his wallet and phone were missing.
Earlier in the week, the accused in the stabbing incident, Jeremy Joseph Christian, appeared in court charged with murder, attempted murder, possession of a weapon and intimidation.
During a brief court appearance on Tuesday, he made no plea, but shouted slogans such as: "You call it terrorism. I call it patriotism" and "death to the enemies of America".
He is due to appear in court again on 7 June.
Two fire engines responded to the blaze that happened at about 06:00 GMT on Wednesday.
The Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service said a female was treated for burns to her arm.
It said the fire was being "treated as accidental".
Miedema, 20, has won 48 caps for the Netherlands and was part of their squad for the 2015 Women's World Cup.
She scored 14 goals in 22 league games for Bayern this season as they finished second in the Frauen Bundesliga.
"She is seen as one of the best young strikers in the world," manager Pedro Martinez Losa said. | A Grade II*-listed railway station building in Cardiff is among this year's top 10 most endangered buildings.
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Police in Portland, Oregon, have arrested a man suspected of stealing belongings from one of two people stabbed to death on a local train earlier this week.
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Two adults and six children have escaped serious injury after a fire at a house on the Falls Road in west Belfast.
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Arsenal have signed Bayern Munich and Netherlands international striker Vivianne Miedema from the start of the 2017-18 Women's Super League season. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | The mother's parents argued it would be better for the six-year-old to come to them.
They said that as the victim's family, they shared his loss and were best placed to console him.
But experts told the court it would be better for him to stay in England.
A social worker, a court-appointed guardian and an independent psychiatrist all said it would be better for the boy to stay with his father's sister and her family as he barely knew his grandparents, and did not speak Cantonese.
The case was heard in April, but the judgement was only published this week.
The boy's father had beaten his mother to death a year earlier, in what the judge called a premeditated and carefully planned attack. He maintains his innocence but was convicted in January, and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum 28-year term. The boy was placed with foster parents.
The grandparents said the mother had been their only child together. The grandmother told the court the boy was the "most precious and most close relative" she now had.
They are wealthy people; the grandfather owns and runs two factories and they have two spacious homes, including a villa by the sea. They had found a private English school for the boy and an English-speaking nanny.
The grandmother described how the murder had disturbed the boy. She had been told he had started throwing stones at classmates and argued he would have a "quieter" environment in China where he would be "at peace".
Their lawyer argued the grandparents and the boy were the "true and only victims" in the case, and they were the best people to console him.
However, the boy had only met his maternal grandparents once before the murder, on a visit to China when he was a toddler. They have no language in common.
A social worker said the boy was worried about going to China because his grandparents were strangers to him and he could not speak Cantonese. By contrast, he was very excited to spend time with his paternal aunt and her family.
A psychiatrist and guardian warned a move to China would be a huge upheaval and adjustment for a child still suffering from a huge emotional and psychological shock.
The judge, Mr Justice Holman, acknowledged that research suggested children in this situation would do better living with the victim's family, rather than that of the perpetrator.
But he said it should not be ruled out "if the prospective parenting family fully and sincerely acknowledge and accept the guilt [of the person who committed the crime] and ascribe no responsibility to the victim".
In this case, the sister accepted her brother was guilty and said she considered him a liar.
The judge said it was of "the utmost importance" the boy maintain contact with his grandparents in China, whether through face-to-face meetings or through Skype.
It has been reported that Xia has failed to demonstrate he possesses the necessary funds to complete the deal.
But BBC Sport has learned £52m has been paid into an escrow account, ready to be transferred to current Villa owner Randy Lerner.
Xia has also provided proof of funds that will guarantee he takes on an existing debt of £25m.
The same amount will be payable to American Lerner if Villa, relegated from the Premier League, return to the top flight within three years.
Xia has also provided guarantees to the Premier League and Football League that he can cover the club's operating costs for the next two seasons.
A joint enquiry by the two leagues continues and will not be rushed as all aspects of the proposed takeover are scrutinised, including the likely make-up of the new board of directors.
Villa remain without a permanent manager to replace Frenchman Remi Garde, who was sacked in March.
Former Everton and Manchester United boss David Moyes, who was on a three-man shortlist for the job, pulled out of the running last week.
Ex-West Brom and Chelsea manager Roberto di Matteo remains in the frame. | A boy whose father is in jail for his mother's murder should live with the killer's sister and family in England, not his maternal grandparents in China - a family court judge has ruled.
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Aston Villa's takeover by Chinese businessman Dr Tony Xia is not on the verge of collapse. |
Please summarize the document below. | The Newry Democrat leads the week's coverage with a mother's "anguish" for her son after he was falsely accused of raping another man.
The Newry woman has told the paper about the devastating impact it has had on him.
"Before this he was happy-go-lucky, loved to get out and about," she said.
"Now he takes three sleeping tablets at night... he takes anti-depressants."
The man who made the claims was convicted of perverting the course of justice.
Also in the paper is some rubbish news for those living in the Newry and Mourne District Council area, where councillors have voted to put an end to glass bottles being put in blue bins.
Those who want to recycle their bottles (wine, beer or otherwise) will have to take them to their nearest bottle bank.
The paper reports the move could save that £250,000 in 2018/19, but that those savings could be trashed if people start putting glass in their black bins.
In Glenarm there's worrying news about the state of GP services.
The Larne Times reports that 2,000 patients are set to be reassigned from the local practice after the outgoing GP revealed there had been no applications to replace him after his retirement.
Also in the paper is a story about a graffiti warning that appeared at Woodburn Forest last weekend.
PSNI Larne shared the image, warning that a similar fatal tragedy to that which killed mum-of-three Valerie Young at Colin Glen could happen in the area.
A PSNI spokesperson said: "We are actively looking for anyone who is illegally using an off-road vehicle on the road or other public ground."
A spokesperson for NI Water said it was illegal to use scramblers or motorbikes in this area.
The Ulster Gazette carries a story about a Keady woman who pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to 15 horses in her care.
Pictures obtained by the paper show the extent of some of the neglect after some of the horses were left without food or water and made to live in filthy conditions.
Orla Shortt of Granemore Park was given a three-month suspended sentence.
But a man with 118 previous convictions was not so lucky and was jailed for one month for stealing alcohol from a city-centre shop.
Jody Curry has racked up the record aged just 24.
There's a warning to deer poachers in this week's Impartial Reporter.
An anonymous and "legitimate" deer stalker tells the paper that it's only a matter of time before someone gets shot in the midst of the illegal activity.
"The most common form of deer poaching locally is lamping," the paper reports.
"Gangs drive along the roadside and use strong vehicle-mounted lamps to make the deer stand motionless," before shooting it, adds the paper.
The deer stalker warned: "A bullet from one of those high-calibre rifles will travel for a mile-and-a-half. No one can tell where it will end up when shooting at night."
Also in the paper, parents who lost a beloved son tell how gambling can be "a killer".
Pete and Sadie Keogh share the story of their son's death, which they believe was linked to a gambling addiction, in the hope of raising awareness about the dangers of addiction.
Lewis Keogh was 34 when he died and the couple have campaigned tirelessly for tighter regulations.
Mr Keogh tells says: "Research has shown that gambling can release chemicals in to the brain to give a hit like crack cocaine."
Revisiting GP services, the Ulster Herald reports that a Castlederg doctor is on the "verge" of handing in his resignation.
Dr Brendan O'Hare says: "If we do nothing we risk losing GP practices right across the county" and cites increased workloads and difficulty recruiting new GPs to rural areas as the reasons for the crisis.
Joining a "chorus of condemnation", Omagh Ethnic Support Group has "slammed" President trump's travel ban.
Nick Cassidy, from the group, tells the Ulster Herald the ban raises concerns about "racism and xenophobia"
On the same page, former Herald reporter Rachael Quigley, who moved to America six years ago, writes that the American Dream is "literally unfurling into a nightmare, at the head of which is Donald Trump".
Is an accident waiting to happen in Portrush?
That's the question posed by the Coleraine Chronicle as plans are passed for the creation of a new traders' area in a busy Portrush car park.
It says an even bigger risk is now posed for children who could be involved in accidents.
Approval was sought and agreed at a meeting of Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council on Wednesday for the for four trading points at Lansdowne Crescent.
Also on parking, people who use traffic cones to reserve spaces outside their homes are being reminded that the practice is illegal.
Parts of Coleraine, says the Chronicle, are popular with motorists as there is no charge to park cars, but people who live on these streets aren't always keen on sharing the spaces outside their homes. | Scramblers, poachers and false rape allegations all make the headlines in the weekly papers. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Finance Secretary Mark Drakeford told AMs it would be a "democratic outrage" to try and block a Welsh bill to repeal parts of the 2016 Trade Union Act.
He said he took a letter from a cabinet officer to be a "direct threat".
The Welsh Secretary Alun Cairns said he was surprised Welsh ministers were seeking to strengthen trade unions.
The letter, from Ben Gummer, said the Wales Act confirms industrial relations as a UK matter.
Welsh Labour argues the UK government should not impose restrictions on union activity in Wales in devolved services, such as the NHS and schools.
Giving evidence to the constitutional and legislative affairs committee, Mr Drakeford read out some of the correspondence from Mr Gummer.
He said a letter stated "the Wales Bill will clarify that industrial relations are a reserved matter and the UK government will act at the earliest possibility opportunity following commencement of the Wales Act to ensure the legislation protects our public services".
Mr Drakeford told the committee: "You could read that as a fairly direct threat to bring forward legislation to overturn any legislation passed by the National Assembly.
"I'm not conceding for a minute today that Mr Gummer's understanding of competence post the Wales Bill would allow him to do what he says he is going to do.
"In my personal view, it would be a democratic outrage if this National Assembly were to express its view so clearly as to the way we wish public services in Wales to be organised," Mr Drakeford said.
"I think what they're saying is that they will pass a Westminster Bill to overturn the Bill that will be passed in this National Assembly.
"That fight may come, but I would hope that when Westminster ministers had had an opportunity to reflect on the democratic processes that we will have undergone here - and the view of the National Assembly, if that's what it is - they will want to reconsider the course of action that they've set out in this letter."
In her written evidence to the committee, Presiding Officer Elin Jones said she believed the assembly had the right to pass a law overturning the restrictions for devolved services in Wales.
But she said her decision was a "finely balanced one".
Asked about that observation, Mr Drakeford said: "It's either within competence or it's not and the Bill is within competence.
"That's what the Llywydd concludes and that's what I conclude as well."
Plaid Cymru AM Dai Lloyd, who sits on the committee, said the revelation meant his party had been "vindicated" in its warning that the Wales Act represents a "claw-back" and a "potential Westminster poer-grab".
The Secretary of State for Wales, Alun Cairns, said: "The Wales Act 2017, supported by Welsh Government ministers, puts beyond doubt that this policy area is not devolved.
"I am surprised that the Welsh Government is aiming to strengthen the hand of trade unions.
"The UK government has always maintained that industrial relations are a reserved matter, and we will act at the earliest opportunity, following commencement of the Wales Act, to ensure the legislation protects the interest of taxpayers and our public services in Wales." | Ministers have said the UK government may try to overturn their proposed law to scrap rules that make it harder to call strikes in Welsh public services. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | An inquiry official said there was "significant overlap" between its investigation and criminal proceedings, which could cause prejudice in court.
Lord Janner's family are calling for the "deeply flawed" inquiry into him to be dropped.
Labour said the whole abuse inquiry was facing a "crisis of credibility", but the PM said she had confidence in it.
Lord Janner died before a court could examine 22 allegations against him of sex offences against boys between the 1960s and 1980s.
Leicestershire Police are still investigating other men, who have also been accused by those who made allegations against Lord Janner.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission is also investigating the way the Janner case was dealt with by police.
The IICSA had been due to start public hearings on 7 March but officials say these need to be delayed because they might involve alleged victims of Lord Janner who also have to give evidence in other investigations.
The IICSA said in a statement that it wanted to "avoid potential issues around witness overlap" with police and the IPCC, but was still committed to holding oral hearings.
Lord Janner's son, Daniel Janner QC, said the delayed hearings were part of a "deeply flawed and disgracefully unfair strand" of the inquiry and they should be dropped.
"The correct place for justice is a court of law and not the inquiry, where proper cross-examination of false allegations is not allowed," he added.
"My father has been silenced through death and so any pretence at fairness or justice is a farce."
The IICSA was set up to examine whether public bodies, including the police, had failed in their duty to protect children from sexual abuse and to examine allegations of abuse involving "well-known people".
The inquiry has suffered a series of setbacks, including resignations of three chairwomen and senior lawyers.
On Wednesday, another of the lawyers involved, Aileen McColgan, quit amid concerns about the inquiry's leadership.
It is now on its fourth chairwoman after Professor Alexis Jay, who led the Rotherham child abuse inquiry, replaced New Zealand judge Dame Lowell Goddard in August.
Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said Prime Minister Theresa May and Home Secretary Amber Rudd needed to explain to MPs what was going wrong.
"The inquiry was established by Theresa May and it clearly isn't working," she said.
"The victims of child sex abuse have put their faith in this inquiry. The very least they deserve is some openness from government and an explanation for what is going on."
Earlier, Labour's Yvette Cooper said the home affairs select committee, which she chairs, had contacted the lawyers who had left and Lowell Goddard to learn what had gone wrong with the investigation.
"What's unclear is how much this has been about legacy problems - and clearly some personality issues - and whether there have also been structural issues over the last two years, or whether there are ongoing problems for the future," she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
The inquiry's third chairman, Lowell Goddard, resigned in August. She has instructed lawyers to fight newspaper claims that she had made racist remarks.
Professor Jay has also been under criticism from survivors' groups because of her background in social work - a profession they say has failed them.
At Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Mrs May said it was important the inquiry continued and that she had "full confidence" in Prof Jay and her ability to lead it.
Meanwhile, the Independent Police Complaints Commission has confirmed it is investigating the conduct of five officers linked to the Met's Operation Midland investigation into paedophile allegations against VIPs - which closed in March without a single arrest or charge.
They range from a deputy assistant commissioner to a detective sergeant.
One of them will also be investigated over his involvement in Operation Vicente - which looked into allegations made about the late Sir Leon Brittan.
This IPCC investigation is separate from the one looking into the handling of the Lord Janner case.
An independent review of Operation Midland by Sir Richard Henriques, released last week, found "numerous errors".
Operation Midland was launched after claims that boys had been sexually abused by a group of powerful men from politics, the military and law enforcement agencies at locations across southern England and in London in the 1970s and 1980s.
It relied heavily on evidence from a complainant known by the pseudonym "Nick", who is now being investigated by the Met for allegedly attempting to pervert the course of justice. | The Independent Inquiry Into Child Sexual Abuse has delayed hearings into the late Lord Janner. |
What is the summary of the following article? | Thomas Mason, 67, brandished a six-inch blade when he was challenged stealing alcohol and a deep-fat fryer from Morrisons in Penrith in May.
Carlisle Crown Court heard that Mason, of Sunderland, had 266 convictions dating back five decades.
He admitted possessing a bladed weapon and using threatening behaviour. He was jailed for 16 months.
Prosecuting, Francis McEntee said Mason became agitated when a store detective mentioned calling police and pointed a knife at him.
The hearing was told that Mason, of Hylton Road, had a history of mental health problems.
Sentencing him, Judge Peter Davies said: "You have an appalling record. You should have left your previous convictions long behind you."
Alongside co-driver Daniel Barritt, Evans equalled their result from the opening round in Monte Carlo.
Evans, 28, experienced a puncture on day two but completed the 18 stages in the DMACK M-Sport Ford Fiesta.
Toyota's Latvala had a 29 second advantage over M-Sport's Ott Tanak who finished in second place.
Reigning champion Sebastian Ogier completed the podium in third while Evans was once again the best-placed British driver.
The Welshman drove for M-Sport in the top class for two seasons in 2014 and 2015, but was demoted to the WRC2 class in 2016.
He made his return to the top class in January 2017 after a 12-month absence.
The third round of the WRC starts in Mexico on 9 March.
The British Christmas Tree Growers Association does not gather official data but it estimates we purchase between 6 million and 8 million real Christmas trees every year in the UK, making it an industry worth hundreds of millions of pounds.
And Scotland is a large producer, with ideal soil, good weather conditions and an abundance of open space providing an ideal grounding for growth.
At Edenmill Farm, at the foot of the Campsie Hills, near Blanefield in Stirlingshire, thousands of Christmas trees are planted, nurtured and cut down each year.
Managing director Mark Gibson realised that Christmas trees would complement his landscaping and horticultural business by giving the 60-strong staff more to do in the winter time.
He said: "In late November we can start looking at harvesting. December-time we can start looking at retailing, and in January, February, and March we can start looking at pruning and planting. So it keeps everybody busy all year round. It's perfect."
But like the Scotch Whisky industry, the Christmas tree business requires patience.
A typical Nordman Fir (the most popular type of Christmas tree) has a life cycle of about 10 years, so it is a long-term investment for a grower.
During that time, the Nordman and Fraser Firs, Scots Pine and Norway Spruce trees found in Scotland go through a regime of fertilisation, pruning, and shaping, before being labelled, harvested and wrapped in netting to be sold.
Edenmill Farm is one of many sending Scottish Christmas trees to customers down south.
Mark Gibson explained why they grow so well here.
He said: "We have perfect soil, which is really light and fluffy.
"We also have rock six inches under the ground, which really stops the taproot of the Nordman Fir growing which gives it a better shape, because it doesn't grow quickly, and doesn't grow really tall and thin.
"We get enough rain, and we get a bit of sunshine. So the trees are really happy."
After the Christmas lights are switched off and the baubles are put away, trees which are disposed of responsibly can end up being chipped and turned into material for woodland paths or compost.
Back on the land where they came from, the 10-year cycle begins all over again. | A thief with more than 260 convictions has been jailed for threatening supermarket staff with a knife.
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Welshman Elfyn Evans finished sixth as Jari-Matti Latvala won the second round of the World Rally Championship (WRC) in Sweden.
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As we buy our Christmas trees this December, how much thought do we give to where they have come from and the work that has gone into them? |
Can you summarize the following information? | Jones' credentials put him "out on his own" according to Scotland's Hastings, who led the 1993 tour to New Zealand.
"I think Jones is showing his characteristics as a leader of men," said Hastings.
Jones led the Lions in the decisive final Test in Australia in 2013.
"He's a guy that's been around the block more than once. No-one else (is in the frame)," added Hastings, who was also part of the winning tour of Australia in 1989.
"I think Jones is out on his own. [England's] Dylan Hartley's gone backwards a wee bit."
Media playback is not supported on this device
The Wales lock, 31, is also seen as a front-runner by World Cup-winning captain Johnson and Ireland's O'Driscoll, even though he only took over the Wales leadership on a regular basis in 2017.
"The front-runner has to be Alun Wyn Jones, he captained the Lions in the final game in 2013, he's respected in New Zealand and you have to anticipate he's going to be a Test starter. He certainly would be on my team," said O'Driscoll, Lions captain in 2005 and 2009.
"Alun Wyn is probably the front-runner at the moment but there's lots to happen between now and the announcement of the squad."
Former England lock Johnson, who was victorious on the 1997 tour of South Africa and also led the 2001 trip to Australia, thinks Jones' performance in the Six Nations defeat to England in Cardiff has edged him ahead of Scotland's Greig Laidlaw, Hartley and Ireland's Rory Best.
"All four nations captains have a chance, though Greig is out of the tournament which is unfortunate," Johnson told BBC Wales Sport.
Media playback is not supported on this device
"You've got two hookers, but I thought Jones played really well so maybe he'll have his nose slightly in front.
"He's an experienced player, been out there before, playing pretty well."
The Lions tour to New Zealand kicks off on 3 June, with three tests on 24 June, 1 and 8 July in Auckland, Wellington and Auckland again.
Media playback is not supported on this device | Former British and Irish Lions captains Gavin Hastings, Martin Johnson and Brian O'Driscoll have backed Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones to lead the Lions tour to New Zealand. |
Can you summarize this content? | Bar Soba, which was first launched as a pop-up restaurant at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1997, already has five sites across Glasgow, Edinburgh and Leeds.
It is now considering opening restaurants in Aberdeen, Newcastle, Liverpool and Manchester.
The expansion follows a £3m investment by the Business Growth Fund (BGF).
The company, which serves creative cocktails and South-East Asian street dishes, is on course to turn over in excess of £6m during the current financial year.
Following the initial expansion into the north of England, it hopes to eventually operate at 30 different locations.
Brad Stevens, founder and chief executive, said: "I'm really excited about our ambitious expansion plans and that we've found the right partner to provide the funding and expertise we need to accelerate our growth.
"Expanding to 12 city centre locations will allow even more drinkers and diners to enjoy our combination of indulgent cocktails, freshly prepared street food inspired by the night markets of South East Asia and music.
"We have been researching locations we feel will suit the Bar Soba offering but are always open to hear ideas from others."
As well as providing capital, BGF introduced the business to Mohan Mansigani, who has been appointed as non-executive chairman.
He served as chief finance officer at Casual Dining Group - the company behind brands including Bella Italia, Café Rouge and Belgo - from 2002 until 2014, having previously worked as finance director at Costa Coffee and TGI Fridays and in senior finance roles at Grand Metropolitan and Pizza Hut.
Mr Mansigani, said: "I've worked with some really vibrant brands during my career and I see many of the same elements in the DNA of Bar Soba.
"I'm looking forward to working with Brad to help him fulfil his ambitions for the business, which I believe will prove to be just as popular in the north of England and further afield as it has been in its Scottish heartland."
BGF's existing UK investments in the leisure and hospitality sectors include Mexican restaurant group Barburrito, tapas brand Camino, and Thai chain Giggling Squid.
The Loons were comfortable 4-1 winners while Clyde won 2-0 at Elgin City.
Berwick Rangers leapfrogged Arbroath into third thanks to a 2-0 victory at Cowdenbeath as Arbroath grabbed a late 1-1 draw against Annan Athletic.
And Montrose beat bottom side Edinburgh City 1-0 to go eighth and leave City on one point - four points adrift.
Andy Munro headed home a David Cox corner to give Forfar the lead before Sean Dickson levelled for the visitors on the stroke of half-time with a superb strike from the edge of the area.
Forfar went in front again when Gavin Swankie teed up Josh Peters, who soon grabbed his second with a shot from distance. Danny Denholm completed the scoring in added time as Forfar maintained their 100% league record.
Sean Higgins' early strike was added to by Peter MacDonald for Clyde, who had Martin McNiff sent off near the end.
Gary Fraser's close-range strike was enough for Montrose to secure victory away to City, despite Terry Masson being dismissed.
Two first-half goals from Steven Thomson moved Berwick up to third in the table.
Ryan McCord's stoppage-time equaliser denied Annan at Gayfield. Earlier, Arbroath goalkeeper Robbie Mutch could only parry Omar Kadar's shot into the path of David McKenna, who put the visitors ahead. | A Glasgow-based bar and restaurant chain is planning to open a further seven restaurants across the UK.
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Forfar Athletic maintained their five-point lead at the top of Scottish League Two by beating Stirling Albion as second-placed Clyde also won. |
Can you summarize the given article? | A budget monitoring report revealed 95,000 tickets were issued in 2011/12 (excluding March), compared with 36,000 in 2010/11 and 26,753 in 09/10.
In February about 7,000 motorists were issued with penalty charge notices compared to 3,100 in February 2011.
The council said extended camera enforcement had resulted in more fines.
Drivers illegally using bus lanes are sent a £60 penalty charge notice, reduced to £30 if paid promptly.
Councillor Tony Page said: "It's not that more people are driving in bus lanes it's that we've extended the camera enforcement of our existing bus lanes."
But Kenneth Guest, 47, who faced fines of £660 after receiving 11 tickets as a result of one camera in Southcote Lane, claims the sign is not clear.
The father of one, from Reading, said: "It's clear you can't read the sign from six feet away. The font size of the template is less than one inch, but Tony Page said if you can't read the signs you shouldn't be driving."
In response Mr Page replied: "The actual size of the signs and the lettering are all fully compliant. Bus lanes are there not to raise money, they are there to improve and assist the operation of a very good public transport service." | Almost 60,000 more tickets have been issued to motorists using Reading's bus lanes than in the previous year, according to the borough council. |
Summarize the provided information. | Over 34,000 people signed a petition against the farm in Foston, Derbyshire.
The agency said the project would have resulted in "significant pollution due to odour".
Midland Pig Producers, which lodged the plan in 2011, said it was pleased a decision had "finally" been made but it was "not the end of the matter".
The proposal included an anaerobic digester and a biogas combustion plant for treatment of manure and slurry at the site, which would have been situated yards from Foston Hall women's prison.
However, the Environment Agency said it was not satisfied activities could be undertaken "without resulting in significant pollution of the environment due to odour which will result in offence to human senses".
Last year, the Soil Association said it had concerns for the health of prisoners at Foston Hall and villagers in Scropton.
Residents have raised concerns about noise, smell and treatment of the pigs. Some marched through Derby in protest in 2011.
Celebrities including The Wire actor Dominic West and chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall have joined the campaign against the farm.
A spokesperson for Midland Pig Producers said: "While not wishing to second-guess any decision by any other body, it seems inevitable that this outcome will provide others with the reason to refuse any application connected with our plans.
"However, now that we have an actual decision, we can move forward. This is not the end of the matter, but the beginning of the second stage." | A project to build a pig farm for 24,500 animals is in jeopardy after the Environment Agency said the scheme would "offend human senses". |
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