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Katie Prager, 26, died in Kentucky on Thursday, five days after the death of her husband, Dalton Prager, 25.
Katie died in bed on Thursday morning, her mother wrote on Facebook.
"I know Dalton was waiting with open arms, as well as both her grandmothers and a host of family and friends that have gone before her," she wrote.
The couple married in 2011 after falling in love on Facebook.
Doctors had advised against meeting in person, due to the likelihood that Dalton would pass a highly infectious disease to Katie.
The couple had been forced to live in separate states in recent years and were last together for their fifth anniversary in July. Katie had lived in Kentucky, while Dalton was living in Missouri.
Cystic fibrosis clogs the lungs with mucus, making it difficult for patients to breathe. The median survival age is 40.
They had each received lung transplants, which failed.
Dalton had tried desperately but was unable to travel to Kentucky to see Katie one last time before his death.
"He has tried so many times and he has tried so hard. Unfortunately his body is not agreeing with what he wants to do," his mother Renee Prager told the St Louis Post-Dispatch.
The couple raised money for their treatment, and wrote extensively about their difficult experiences.
Lamenting how he and his wife were treated by health insurance companies, Dalton wrote: "They are turning my wife into a number, a statistic, a dollar sign. I cannot lose her! This can't be the end of our love story!
"We are both ready to continue fighting but at this point we are running out of options and need your help. Please help me save my wife Katie!
"We knew her time was short and she was able to do a few things that she wanted," Katie's mother Debbie wrote.
"The days to follow will not be easy but I find comfort in knowing that my girl lived, she really lived."
The couple were compared to the one in the book and film The Fault In Our Stars, that focuses on a young couple battling cancer.
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A young US married couple who bonded through their shared struggles with cystic fibrosis have died within days of each other.
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Zbigniew Ziobro, who is also Poland's prosecutor general, said he would make the appeal in the Supreme Court.
A judge rejected Polanski's extradition in October as "inadmissible".
The director, who lives in France, fled the US ahead of sentencing in 1978 after admitting having sex with a girl aged 13.
Polanski's victim, Samantha Geimer, described the ordeal of giving testimony against Polanski in an interview for the BBC's HARDTalk programme in 2013.
Polanski has French and Polish citizenship. France does not extradite its own citizens but the director occasionally visits Poland, attending a press event in Katowice just last week.
Swiss authorities turned down a US extradition warrant in 2010, after placing Polanski under house arrest for nine months.
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Poland's justice minister says he will appeal against a decision not to extradite film director Roman Polanski to the US for statutory rape.
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Dengue fever is caused by a virus carried by Aedes mosquitoes.
The number of cases has grown dramatically in recent years with close to 60 million people catching it every year.
Although it is fatal in only a small proportion of cases, it means deaths are still in the tens of thousands.
The World Health Organisation says 500,000 people a year need hospital treatment for dengue in Africa, the Americas, the eastern Mediterranean, southeast Asia and the western Pacific.
The currently favoured approach is to search and destroy the mosquitoes using methods such as spraying fogs of insecticides.
But the authorities in Malaysia wanted something more environmentally friendly which did not increase the mosquitoes' resistance and kill their predators.
Which is why the Strathclyde University team, led by mathematician Dr David Greenhalgh, has been working with its Malaysian partners to assess the effectiveness of a new type of mosquito trap.
The exact design is still under wraps but I can reveal that it looks a bit like a yogurt pot.
That belies its huge potential in a new approach to fighting tropical diseases: don't use search and destroy - outsmart the insects.
"The trap contains a chemical solution that attracts female mosquitoes into it," Dr Greenhalgh says.
"There's a piece of paper leading into the chemical solution.
"The female mosquitoes that are attracted to the trap lay their eggs on the piece of paper and the chemical stops the eggs developing."
Mathematics comes into the process because Dr Greenhalgh and colleagues have built a computer model of how the disease spreads.
From that they can simulate how the trap affects the spread of the virus among people and mosquitoes.
He says people go through different stages of the disease.
"There are four different types of dengue, four different serotypes," he says.
"Usually the infection with the first serotype is quite mild.
"But if you get a second infection with a different strain it can have very serious effects."
Dr Greenhalgh adds: "As well as modelling how the people go through those different stages, the mosquitoes also go through different stages.
"So you're trying to model how these populations interact, with mosquitoes biting people, with the disease spreading from people to mosquitoes and vice versa."
The variables in the mathematical model include the number of traps, the area's history of dengue infections, plus the numbers of mosquitoes and breeding sites.
So far the indications are that both the simulation and the real life traps are working well.
In a small-scale test in three blocks of flats in Kuala Lumpur the number of dengue cases was reduced from 53 in 2013 to 13 the following year.
In 2015, after the trial was over, the number of infections rose again to 57.
Dr Greenhalgh warns that these are small numbers but also promising ones.
Further research is now examining the effectiveness of the trap in different conditions.
The collaboration is between Strathclyde, Malaysia's Institute for Medical Research and the Kuala Lumpur-based business One Team Network Solutions, which designs low-tech pest control devices.
The UK delivery partner is the British Council Malaysia. The project is being funded by the UK government's Newton Fund and the Malaysian government's High Impact Programme 2.
If the trap and its mathematical model work on a large scale it will have implications for health on a global scale.
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Researchers at Strathclyde university are working to combat a deadly tropical disease - using mathematics.
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Freda Boyd, 51, from Drumeen Drive in Garvagh, is accused of ill-treating four different people while they were in-patients for mental health disorders at Garvagh Care Home on 22 March 2014.
A solicitor said she would be contesting the four charges.
Ms Boyd did not attend Coleraine Magistrates Court on Friday and the pleas were entered by her solicitor.
The case was adjourned for two weeks.
"This is a very serious matter. This is not something I'm going to deal with in her absence," a judge told the court
Ms Boyd's solicitor said there were questions to be answered as to why it had taken so long to prosecute her.
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A County Londonderry care worker has pleaded not guilty to four counts of ill treating mental health patients.
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About 150 people waved placards and flags at the Ferrybridge Multifuel 2 building site in West Yorkshire.
Protesters claim the general contactor Hitachi Zosen Inova (HZI) had contracted work out to some employers who were not taking on local workers.
An HZI spokesman said it was committed to using UK labour for the project.
Neil Dawson, who helped organise the protest, said: "There's a deep anger from these lads, a lot of them unemployed, who want to secure employment on the project.
"They have the skills, ability and want to make it a success.
"This dispute isn't about foreign workers, it's about the contractor giving these lads a fair opportunity to secure work."
Workers claim guidelines about using local labour under the National Agreement for the Engineering Construction Industry have been bypassed.
Keith Gibson, a construction worker from Hull, said: "At the minute, the construction industry is in crisis.
"We've got no worries whatsoever about European workers, what we're concerned about is companies undercutting terms and conditions."
But HZI said two thirds of workers on the site are from the UK.
It added: "We are confident that the majority of workers, representing hundreds of construction jobs, engaged over the lifetime of the project will be from the UK."
Multifuel Energy Ltd, a joint venture between SSE and Wheelabrator Technologies, opened the power station Ferrybridge Multifuel 1 in 2015.
A second power station, which aims to generate more than 50 megawatts of energy, is now under construction at the site.
SSE said it supported HZI's approach of "trying to maximise local employment opportunities where possible".
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Construction workers have protested at an energy-from-waste plant over the alleged use of cheap labour from abroad.
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They were unable to continue their operations on Tuesday due to high water levels after heavy rainfall.
The search for Mr Cowie, 41, began near the rowing club beside the river at about 21:00 on Sunday.
It carried on throughout Monday and Tuesday but has so far failed to find any trace of the missing man.
Police Scotland, the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency, the Nith Inshore Rescue Service and a coastguard helicopter from Prestwick have been involved in the operation.
Extensive searches have been carried out along the length of the River Nith downstream to the Solway Estuary.
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Police divers have resumed their search for missing Dumfries man Bryan Cowie reported to have fallen into the River Nith on Sunday night.
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Mr Elop rejoined the company in 2014 when Microsoft bought the Finnish company's handset business.
He had been considered a possible chief executive, before the current boss, Satya Nadella, was appointed.
Mr Nadella said the changes would "enable us to deliver better products and services that our customers love at a more rapid pace".
The changes were announced in an email to staff in which Mr Nadella said he would "regret the loss of leadership" that Mr Elop's departure represented.
Mr Elop was chief executive at Nokia between 2010 and 2014, having previously worked at Microsoft.
Terry Myerson will replace him as head of a newly formed team called Windows and Devices Group.
Two other executives, Kirill Tatarinov and Eric Rudder, will also leave the company.
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The former boss of Nokia, Stephen Elop, is to leave Microsoft as part of a management reshuffle.
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International artists were asked to contribute works which demonstrate the impact Ikea has had on their lives.
The Dream of Modern Living? features a coffin made from a Billy Book case and a shelving unit in which a plastic explosive has been set off.
Curator Paul Carey-Kent said: "It's about the power of transformation, in which Ikea provides the raw materials."
Warrington was the location of the UK's first Ikea store, which opened in 1987.
It is said to have the highest visitor numbers of any store in the country, and allegedly the lowest spend per head.
Will Lynn, one of the show's organisers, said: "Everyone has their own personal experience of Ikea and that oscillates between frustration with quite difficult instructions through to the excitement of getting quite affordable designs."
The exhibition runs from 2 October to 14 November.
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An exhibition themed around retail giant Ikea has opened as part of the Warrington Contemporary Arts Festival.
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Noye, 63, was jailed for life at the Old Bailey in 2000 for the stabbing of 21-year-old Stephen Cameron on the M25 at Swanley in Kent in 1996.
A High Court judge sitting at Newcastle Crown Court ordered he must spend at least 16 years in jail before he can be considered for parole.
The victim's mother, Toni Cameron, 63, said she hoped Noye would die in jail.
"It has been 14 years since Stephen was killed and the pain does not go away," she said.
"Noye is a born criminal. It will never be safe to let him free.
"He should spend the rest of his born days in prison. He is evil."
Noye fled to Spain after the stabbing but was extradited in 1998.
Two previous appeals by Noye, in 2001 and 2004, were also unsuccessful.
His minimum term was set at 16 years in 2002 by the then Home Secretary David Blunkett.
Tariffs are now set by judges and people who are serving a life term who were notified of their minimum term by a home secretary can apply to the High Court for a review.
The decision means Noye could be freed in six years' time because of time already spent in jail.
Giving his judgment, Mr Justice Simon said: "I have concluded on this review that there is no proper justification for reducing the minimum term.
"For this reason I set the period which must be served before the applicant can be considered for parole at 16 years.
"The period during which the applicant was held in custody, 11 months and 24 days, must be deducted from this period."
Noye had argued the tariff should be reduced to 10 years to give him credit for time spent in custody after he was arrested in Spain.
He also said he had been suffering from depression and post traumatic stress disorder in jail.
Noye murdered Mr Cameron with a knife he kept in his car as the victim's fiancee, Danielle Cable, looked on.
Noye was already well-known to police before the attack. He had been jailed for 14 years in 1986 for handling gold taken in one of the world's biggest bullion robberies, the 1983 £26m Brinks-Mat case.
Noye admitted killing an undercover detective investigating the case when he found him in shrubbery in the grounds of his home in West Kingsdown in 1985.
A jury found he had been acting in self-defence.
He also claimed self defence in the killing of Mr Cameron, but was convicted of murder by a majority of 11-1.
The policeman who led the murder investigation, former Det Supt Nick Biddiss, said Noye was a career criminal who deserved to be behind bars.
"Noye committed an act of murder and should serve life in prison - and life should mean life.
"He received his tariff and should serve it. He seems to forget the effect he has on his victim's family.
"He's constantly making appeals to the courts and it must have a very debilitating effect on Stephen Cameron's family.
"(Noye) made a lot of money out of crime and was part of that culture in south-east London and the north Kent area.
"He was well known, well respected and well feared in the criminal fraternity.
"They were very cautious of him and will probably continue to be so."
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Road rage killer Kenneth Noye has failed in his bid to have the minimum term he must serve for murder reduced.
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The airport was closed for several hours but officials are working to get it fully operational again.
The overnight blaze - now extinguished - gutted a shopping area at terminal three. Nobody died, but a few people were treated for smoke inhalation.
Thousands of passengers were hit by delays and many flights were diverted.
The fire broke out at about midnight (22:00 GMT) on Wednesday and took some five hours to bring under control.
TV pictures showed the terminal engulfed in flames overnight, then the burnt-out facade in the morning. Thick smoke was seen rising from the building until mid-morning.
"We got here and there was just a cloud of smoke and a terrible smell, the air was so bad we couldn't breathe. There weren't any masks or anything," said passenger Andrea Lauretti, quoted by Reuters news agency.
Possible causes of the fire are being investigated, though a short circuit is thought to be the most likely. Foul play has been ruled out.
The airport was closed throughout the morning, with all outgoing flights cancelled and all but a few overnight long-distance incoming flights blocked.
Airport authorities said they hoped normal service would resume by midday on Thursday, but outward flights were still being cancelled mid-afternoon.
Many passengers were sent to the airport's three other terminals where they were subjected to long delays.
Airlines including national carrier Alitalia are offering alternative flights or refunds to affected passengers.
British Airways, which uses the terminal, had to cancel eight flights from London Heathrow to Rome and another was diverted to Naples.
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Italy has cancelled dozens of flights to and from its busiest airport - Fiumicino in Rome - after a fire gutted part of its international terminal.
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Chief executive Dalton Philips said: "The rules of the game have changed. There is a new price norm."
He said Morrisons' restructuring would target the market between discount chains and the "big four" retailers.
But fears of a price war between supermarkets and discounters wiped £2bn off the combined value of Tesco, Sainsbury and Morrisons shares.
Asda, the fourth of the "big four", is a subsidiary of US retailer Wal-Mart.
Morrisons was the worst performer on the FTSE 100 on Thursday. Its shares fell more than 10% at one point.
Morrison warned that profits in the coming year would be less than £375m, about half the level last year.
By Robert PestonBusiness editor
The company was hit by a one-off £903m exceptional writedown, due to property and IT costs and a disappointing performance from Kiddicare, its baby products business.
Mr Philips told the BBC how the firm would restructure: "This isn't about being a discounter. This is about offering really great value.
"There is a tipping point where the price perception gap has just widened too far between the discounters and the big four and we're going to address that.
"We have identified over a billion pounds that we can take out of our business now and that billion pounds is going to be invested back into our proposition to get those lower prices for our customers."
He said Morrisons would invest in increased efficiency, lower prices, more targeted promotions and a Morrisons loyalty card, so it could track the shopping habits of its customers.
But in a research note, independent analyst Louise Cooper said the company was still not doing enough: "Morrisons is only just catching up with the developments of five to 10 years ago - online, loyalty card, convenience etc - let alone the changes happening now. And there seems little urgency."
Morrisons suffered badly at Christmas, with a "double whammy" of voucher offers from the big four supermarkets and lower prices from the discounters.
Online
Morrisons' online business Morrisons.com has lagged behind the big four supermarkets.
Morrisons only started deliveries through online grocer Ocado in January after signing a £200m 25-year deal last year. The service covers 20% of UK households
The firm has also been slow to recognise the move from big out-of-town stores to local convenience stores. It opened 90 last year, and plans 100 new ones this year. Tesco has some 1,700 convenience stores in the UK.
It is planning to sell Kiddicare and its stake in New York-based food retailer Fresh Direct which it said were not core businesses.
Morrisons increased its dividend by 10%, but added that dividends would increase more slowly in coming years.
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Supermarket chain Morrisons is to slash prices to compete with discount chains after reporting a £176m loss last year.
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We have loads of advice on how taking a few minutes out of your day to get organised can make you feel calmer, clearer and more in control. Why not try a few and let us know how you get on via our Facebook page or Twitter?
10 O'Clock Rule
This is called the 10 o'clock rule, but it could be the 9 o'clock rule, the 11 o'clock rule or whatever suits you. Simply set your watch or phone to beep every night at 10 o'clock.
Whatever you are doing when your alarm goes off, get up and prepare for morning. The beauty with this is that very quickly you won't need the reminder, you will just get into the habit of automatically getting ready.
Things you might want do are:
Once you have figured out what you need to do each day of the working week, make a note of it and stick it on your bedside table or stick it in your phone so you can check it off each night.
Different people have different routines in the morning (check out Kate Cross's morning!), but really productive people spend some time preparing for the day ahead. Here are some tips to try and make your day run smoother.
Check your Calendar
If you actually put appointments in you diary, well done. If you check it regularly, even better!
It's funny how when you made that dental appointment six months ago you were convinced you would remember it. You just didn't remember it this morning.
Take a few minutes to check what you have coming up today and tomorrow to avoid that sickening feeling when you realise you have missed an appointment or meeting… and potentially have to wait months to reschedule it.
Top three tasks
Do you think every morning "I really should do…." and then get side tracked and only remember the task in the evening?
This can go on for days and then you just start to feel despondent at how badly organised you are.
Each day set yourself three tasks that you want to do and make sure you do them. They might be small ones that you keep putting off ("I must ring Mum") or larger one ("I really need to start that assignment/project") but writing it down in the morning will bring it to the forefront of your mind for the day; and checking it off in the evening will give you that warm glow of having achieved something.
Do this every day and you'll soon start motoring through tasks.
Chunk it up
Dream of being BFFs with Zara Larsson? Try learning Swedish with your extra nine minutes - it's her native language!
Sometimes our long term goals get suffocated by our day to day chores. How often have thought "I'd love to learn a foreign language" or "I would love to learn to tap dance"? Sometimes these big "someday, one day" goals never come to anything as we don't know where to start.
Well, a simple way to get going is to break a big task into small chunks.
So, you want to learn a foreign language? Why not make one of your three tasks for today to spend half an hour at lunch browsing the internet to find out what is there, or to ring a local college to see if they do a course? It may only take five minutes to start on the road to your new life, and you have just acquired nine more minutes a day by not hitting snooze.
Use your smart phone
You probably lose more time browsing social media on your phone than this tip will save, but that's a different article altogether!
There are loads of free apps which can help you get organised, but just using the calendar, notes and email apps that probably came with your phone will help you take control. Reminders are a great way to prompt you when you are out and about to do things.
Also, if you just can't resist hitting the snooze button then you can usually disable the snooze function on you phone's alarm, so it's not a case of "Don't Hit Snooze" but "Can't Hit Snooze". Go on, try it. Dare you.
If you want to take your organisational skills to the next level, why not introduce a weekly planning session - ask yourself, what is in my calendar for the coming week? What three big tasks do I want to achieve this week?
Take a bit of time to get your head around the upcoming week. If you know what to expect, then you should be calmer and most importantly, happier.
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Why not use the extra nine minutes you get each morning from not hitting snooze to get your day organised?
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Amesbury-based Mears Care Limited was criticised in a Care Quality Commission (CQC) report after it made unannounced visits in June and July.
The report found standards were not being met in five areas including medicine management, staff training and support and quality of service.
Alan Long, from Mears, said it had put in an action plan to improve standards.
Mears took over the contract, from Careline, in May, to look after the elderly in their homes.
Mr Long said an unexpected number of staff then left, leaving Mears "unable to operate properly".
He said the company "sincerely apologised" to the service users and their families who had seen "their service deteriorate since May".
He said: "The office staff left without notice and the majority of care staff left with them, leaving us with very poor cover."
Adrian Hire, whose 92-year-old mother died last month, said he could "not help wondering" if his mother "may have lived longer" if Mears had not been responsible for her care.
"Her health slowly diminished when Mears got involved," he said.
Councillor Christine Crisp, from Wiltshire Council, said they were looking "very carefully" at the action plan submitted by Mears.
She said: "What Mears have to do now is answer the criticisms of the CQC. The CQC will have to re-inspect to make sure Mears have lived up to their promises.
"At the same time, Wiltshire Council will be looking to ensure that our patients and people requiring care are getting it."
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A home care firm in Wiltshire has apologised to clients and their families for its poor service.
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The Australia opener is being investigated over claims of an attack in the early hours of Sunday morning, leading to him being dropped from Wednesday's Champions Trophy match against New Zealand.
Source: ESPN Cricinfo
The other 15 players can now really get together and coach Mickey Arthur can say to his players "this is what happens if you step out of line because it is totally unacceptable".
Arthur can get up and ask them: "Do you want to come here and do something special, to win the Ashes against all the odds? Or do you simply want to be a laughing stock?"
I would expect a ferocious response from the players if they're asked that.
If Warner stays on the tour I would expect his presence to add to the banter quite frankly. He's the type of character who can rile the opposition anyway, and I would expect England to take full advantage of his presence in the middle.
Because, let's face it, the players won't need any excuse to fan the flames of anticipation and rivalry during the Ashes.
While this is an opportunity to over-hype things, it won't make any difference to cricket's most famous Test series though.
If Australia are not fully committed or preparing properly, they will be beaten by England, it's as simple as that. And the Australian public would be mortified, because the least they expect from their side is discipline, professionalism and dedication.
Warner's behaviour personifies a lack of discipline, a dropping of standards, that would never have happened in the days of Australia's former captain Steve Waugh. Waugh has the best win percentage of any Test captain, with 41 wins out of 57 matches, and led Australia to victory in the 1999 World Cup.
It is no coincidence that when teams are successful, as Waugh's so clearly was, every aspect, both on and off the field, is also successful. You didn't hear about Waugh's players being out late or getting involved in the kind of incident that Warner was.
Australia have lost a lot of their key players recently, which is why they need 100% from everyone on this tour.
They are already without their captain, Michael Clarke, who has been struggling with a lower back injury, so this is hardly what they need right now. When you're struggling on the field at the start of a tough tour, you simply don't want lapses that smack of unprofessionalism.
Former captain Ricky Ponting is playing for Surrey and has made a great start to life playing in England, but recalling him is unlikely. Ponting is still a fine player, but he's retired from international cricket now, and were Australia to recall him it would look desperate.
July 10-14: First Test, Trent Bridge (11:00 BST)
18-22: Second Test, Lord's (11:00)
August 1-5: Third Test, Old Trafford (11:00)
9-13: Fourth Test, Chester-le-Street (11:00)
21-25: Fifth Test, The Oval (11:00)
29: First Twenty20 international, Southampton (day-night) (18:30)
31: Second Twenty20 international, Chester-le-Street (14:30)
September 3: ODI: Scotland v Australia, The Grange (10:15)
6: First ODI, Headingley (10:15)
8: Second ODI, Old Trafford (10:15)
11: Third ODI, Edgbaston (d/n) (14:00)
14: Fourth ODI, Cardiff (10:15)
16: Fifth ODI, Southampton (d/n) (14:00 BST)
To be frank, the Warner incident is bizarre and should not really shouldn't be happening in this day and age.
Why was a player out at that time in the night in the middle of a major tournament? That is an issue that needs to be addressed by England as well, because Root, Stuart Broad and Chris Woakes were also in that bar wearing silly wigs in the early hours of the morning.
The players might not have a game for a few days, but is that really sending out the right image as an international sportsman?
Saying all that, there can never be an excuse for an unprovoked assault, which is what this seems to have been.
Warner has clearly got a few problems and has 'form', as they say, as shown by a foul-mouthed rant against a journalist on Twitter last month, which led to him being fined by Cricket Australia.
We don't know what the punishment will be, but Cricket Australia have to deal with it strongly. After seeing how Arthur dealt with the four players dropped for failing to do their feedback or homework or whatever you want to call it, I think that's what will happen.
Let's be clear though that Warner is one of Australia's key men, a fine stroke player who can really get after a bowling attack and take the initiative away from the England bowlers.
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This might sound strange, but the allegations that David Warner launched an unprovoked attack on England's Joe Root could actually galvanise Australia ahead of the Ashes.
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The 07:30 BST journey from Douglas to Liverpool and the 11:15 return have been cancelled along with the 08:45 to Heysham and its 14:15 return crossing.
The Steam Packet Company said its evening and overnight crossings are also "subject to disruption."
All passengers are advised to contact the ferry operators.
A Met Office spokesman said winds could reach severe gale force nine, around 60 mph (97 km/h), this afternoon.
He added that there will be a gradual improvement overnight and into Wednesday.
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Gale force winds in the Irish Sea have forced the cancellation of all morning ferry sailings between the Isle of Man and UK on Tuesday.
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The data breach by South Central Ambulance Service (SCAS) included publishing the age, sexuality and religion of almost 3,000 staff members.
The information has been revealed by a BBC Radio Berkshire Freedom of Information request to the service.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) is investigating.
The breach affected all 2,826 staff who were employed by the organisation, which covers Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire and Oxfordshire, in October 2013, and related to the data which was attached to a report on its website, SCAS said.
In a statement it said it was made aware by the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) of the "serious" data breach on 24 April 2014 and took immediate action to remove the personal data.
"All affected individuals, including current and past members of staff, were informed of this breach in a personal letter from the chief executive officer," it said.
It added: "We have undertaken a thorough review of all our published information on the website - over 2000 documents - and we can confirm that this was the only document affected."
Debbie Watson, from the Unite union, which represents some of the affected staff members, said the breach was "astonishing" and it "shouldn't have happened".
"If this can happen to staff data, which should be confidential, what about their patient data as well?," she asked.
SCAS said it took its "information governance responsibilities very seriously" and had been cooperating fully with the ICO.
It said it had drafted an action plan to mitigate the risk of such an event happening again, and added that it had not been patient or clinically related.
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The personal data of thousands of ambulance service staff has been accidentally published online, it has been revealed.
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David Cameron was giving evidence to the liaison committee, which is made up of the chairs of select committees at Westminster. Neil Parish, who chairs the environment, food and rural affairs committee, put Mr Cameron on the spot.
Neil Parish: "Are you very keen on tidal power? We have the Bristol channel, which has the second highest rise and fall in the world. We could increase our amount of renewable energy without taking good quality land to put solar panels on it."
David Cameron: "Instinctively, I can see the strength of the argument for tidal power, because one of the problems with renewables is whether they can provide base-load power.
"Nuclear can. Wind cannot, because it is intermittent. But tidal, because the tide is always going in or out, can provide base-load power. The problem with tidal power, simply put, is that at the moment we have not seen any ideas come forward that can hit a strike price in terms of pounds per megawatt-hour that is very attractive. That is the challenge for tidal.
"Maybe they can come up with something. They are very long-term schemes with big investments up front, and they can last for many, many years, but right now my enthusiasm is reduced slightly by the fact that the cost would be quite high."
Neil Parish: "The tidal scheme in Swansea definitely has a very high capital cost, but if you put that over a great number of years you will find that the power is naturally limitless and the cost is inexpensive."
Mr Cameron: "Obviously we have to look at the figures as they come out. As I have said, tidal power has got the permanence to it. There are important economic benefits in terms of urban renewal and all the rest of it. I totally see all those arguments and have seen some exciting prospects, but as I said, you have to come back to the question of what the action I take will do to the security of supply and the cost of supply. In all the arguments about renewables, you always have to ask yourself what that will put on a household bill."
During the later days of the coalition government, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats squabbled over which of them was the driving forced behind support for it within government.
Then the election intervened and, returned to power, it dawned on the Conservatives just how expensive (much more than nuclear, I'm told) the project would be. It wouldn't be the first policy to be embraced enthusiastically by a party before an election only to be rejected afterwards.
The Lib Dems have accused their former coalition partners of "playing games" over the project. Peter Black AM told me: "A new, more affordable strike price has been submitted by the company. My view is that it's more realistic and should be agreed."
The project was raised during Welsh Questions in the Commons by the former Welsh Secretary Cheryl Gillan. She asked her successor-but-one Stephen Crabb: "When can we expect to hear what financial support will be forthcoming from the Government so that this exciting project can proceed without delay?"
Stephen Crabb said she was right. "The Swansea tidal lagoon proposition is very exciting and commands wide support across the business community in Wales, but we also need to recognise that the project is asking for a very significant level of public subsidy and intervention. It is absolutely right that the Treasury and the Department of Energy and Climate Change should conduct very robust due diligence in making sure that such projects will deliver value for the taxpayer."
The company itself is confident it can reach a deal at a price which it believes will make the project viable.
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I missed this on Tuesday due to a deadline clash with a Westminster Hall debate so I tip my hat to Construction News for spotting the prime minister's "reduced" enthusiasm for the Swansea tidal lagoon project.
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Last October, the Japanese company said its NI workforce was likely to be impacted by 1,800 job losses across the UK.
The firm employs just over 700 people in Northern Ireland, 451 in Belfast and 250 in Londonderry.
However, Unite has now said total job losses across Northern Ireland are likely to be in the region of 11 to 20.
The union said that management had indicated that the bulk of the workforce are no longer included in the scope of potential redundancies being considered currently.
A spokesperson for the company said it could not comment on the union's claim because the consultation process was still ongoing.
Fujitsu, which has 14,000 UK staff, said the job losses across its UK offices were necessary to better compete with foreign rivals that offer IT services more cheaply.
The firm has a range of businesses in the UK, from software services to providing air conditioning units.
Last March, Fujitsu announced that 40 employees faced redundancy as it was closing its maintenance and repair centre in Antrim.
It said following a review, it was transferring the work to Belfast, and Solihull in England.
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Fujitsu's Northern Ireland operation looks to have avoided significant job losses, a trade union has said.
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The Briton floored his American opponent with a peach of a right-hand counter and after Martin was knocked down again, the referee called a halt.
The 26-year-old is his country's sixth bona fide heavyweight world champion.
Joshua is also just the fourth man to win a pro heavyweight world title while still a reigning Olympic champion.
And he is the first Briton to win both the super-heavyweight Olympic gold and a version of the world heavyweight title - London-born Lennox Lewis was fighting for Canada when he won the 1988 Olympic super-heavyweight title in Seoul.
Listen to BBC Radio 5 live's Mike Costello describe the closing moments of the fight
Joshua's victory now brings a super-fight against fellow Briton and WBA and WBO champion Tyson Fury a step closer.
Champion Martin, who was making the first defence of the title he won in January, entered the ring wearing a tall crown, a fur-trimmed, velvet cape and a smile as broad as his shoulders. But the smile soon disappeared.
Some thought previously unbeaten Martin, 29, would trouble Joshua with his southpaw stance - he was the first left-hander Joshua had faced in the paid ranks - but he barely threw a punch in anger.
It took Joshua half of the first round to find his range but when he did, he landed with three or four big right hands that appeared to rattle the champion.
The challenger staggered Martin with a sweet left hook early in the second, before a beautifully timed right put him on the seat of his pants.
Martin rose at eight but after another massive right put him down again, referee Jean-Pierre van Imschoot counted him out on his feet, one minute and 32 seconds into the round.
Remarkably, Joshua now has 16 knockouts from 16 pro fights and has only boxed 34 rounds in total. His only fight to go past three rounds was a seventh-round stoppage of Dillian Whyte last time out.
Joshua joins Floyd Patterson, Muhammad Ali and Leon Spinks as the only men to be professional heavyweight world champions while still reigning Olympic champions.
Patterson won middleweight gold at the 1952 Helsinki Games and went on to beat Archie Moore to claim the vacant world heavyweight title on 30 November 1956 (Gennadiy Shatkov succeeded Patterson as Olympic middleweight champion in Melbourne just one day later).
Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, won light-heavyweight gold in 1960 before dethroning Sonny Liston in 1964; Spinks won light-heavyweight gold in 1976 before dethroning Ali in 1978, in only his eighth paid fight.
While nobody has won a world heavyweight title faster than Spinks, Joshua surpasses Ali (20 fights), Lennox Lewis (22) and Mike Tyson (28).
Frank Bruno, Lewis, David Haye and Bob Fitzsimmons complete the list of Britain's heavyweight world champions. Herbie Hide and Henry Akinwande were WBO title-holders when the belt was not taken seriously by many of the elite fighters in the division.
The IBF belt was stripped from Fury when the Manchester boxer opted for a rematch with Wladimir Klitschko rather than a mandatory defence.
Should Fury beat Klitschko in their rematch on 9 July, a blockbuster meeting between the two Britons would be inevitable.
Also in the mix is former heavyweight world champion Haye, who returned to the ring with a first-round knockout of Mark de Mori in January and fights again next month.
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Anthony Joshua stopped Charles Martin in two rounds at London's O2 Arena to claim the IBF heavyweight title in only his 16th professional fight.
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Hackers claiming to belong to Islamic State targeted the TV network.
TV5Monde said all 11 of its TV channels, its website and social media accounts were hit.
"It's not the first time people claiming to be part of Islamic State are targeting websites," said Jean Charles Brisard, an expert on terrorism and terrorism financing.
"Usually they take control of a website and change its home page.
"But now we see a different scale with cyber-attacks targeting a TV network. Regarding the scale of the attack it's totally new."
The French government has condemned the attack.
The prime minister, Manuel Valls, called it an "unacceptable attack" on freedom of information.
Earlier, French government ministers visited the channel's Paris headquarters in a show of solidarity.
"We are analysing and we are working with experts and specialists from the French government to try and find out where from, how, and who did that, and for what purpose was TV5Monde especially targeted," said the company's director, Yves Bigot.
A message posted by the hackers on TV5Monde's Facebook site read: "The CyberCaliphate continues its cyberjihad against the enemies of Islamic State."
They also posted documents purporting to be ID cards of relatives of French soldiers involved in anti-IS operations.
France is part of the US-led coalition carrying out air strikes against IS in Iraq and Syria.
TV5Monde's digital director, Helene Zemmour, called the hack "unprecedented and large-scale".
The Paris prosecutor's office says it has opened a terrorism investigation into the attack.
Hackers claiming to work on behalf of the Islamic State have seized control of the Twitter accounts of other media organisations before, such as Newsweek.
In January they hacked into the Twitter page and YouTube site of the US military's Central Command.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
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The cyber-attack on French broadcaster TV5Monde is on "a different scale", a terrorism expert has told Newsbeat.
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The British Geological Survey (BGS) confirmed a 2.9 magnitude earthquake near Loughborough in Leicestershire at 05:20 GMT.
It was felt in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire and one man described it as "like an explosion in the distance".
The BGS said it was an average tremor for the UK and one million times weaker than the 2011 Japanese earthquake.
Leicestershire Police and the fire service both said there were no reports of damage in the county.
Reports of the tremor came from several locations in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire.
Source: BBC Science
What causes an earthquake?
Mike Flood, 45, who lives in Loughborough, said he was awake when the tremor struck.
"It was almost like a plane going over or an explosion in the distance," he said.
"The house creaked - there was no house moving or pictures falling off the wall, but the house just creaked.
"It was strange - you know something's happened and you know it's not a normal thing."
Joy Russell did not feel the tremor in Cosby, south of Leicester, but her dogs were terrified by the experience.
She said: "I was woken by my dogs who were howling like banshees. I raced downstairs thinking golly, something's happened.
"They were all really stressed and hopping about. They just couldn't wait to get out of the house. They were absolutely panic stricken."
Another caller, from Leicester, said: "It sounded like an underground train coming and everything wobbled."
Seismologist Dr Brian Baptie, from the BGS, said: "The East Midlands does have history of small to moderate earthquakes.
"The shaking would last for a few seconds - it can be a pretty scary experience."
The tremor follows just days after a similar event in Ollerton, Nottinghamshire on 12 and 14 January.
Those earthquakes were recorded by the BGS as 1.4 and 1.8 magnitude.
Julian Bukits, of BGS, said: "Earthquakes generally have to be of 4.5 to 5 magnitude to cause damage."
Both the BGS and the US Geological Survey reported the Loughborough tremor, which was about 13km (8 miles) below ground.
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An earthquake has been felt by people in several parts of the East Midlands.
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p
The party launched the document at a hotel in South Antrim, one of seven constituencies in which there are TUV candidates.
Party leader Jim Allister said he wanted the UK to be "liberated from the clutches of the EU".
He also said the system of mandatory coalition at Stormont should end.
Mr Allister said the Stormont Executive should be a voluntary coalition.
He said the current system was denying voters "basic democratic rights" and that people should be able to change their government.
"This election and the business of government-making provide the perfect illustration of the strength of the TUV's case against mandatory coalition," he said.
Main pledges
Policy guide: Where the parties stand
"Just as the prospect of the people of the UK in a free election opting to change their government underscores the totalitarian denial of that right to the people of Northern Ireland when it comes to Stormont.
"If the Stormont system was applied at Westminster, then, despite the election, Cameron, Clegg and Miliband would all end up in Downing Street, with no opposition.
"How absurd. How unworkable, as we witness day, after day at Stormont. Yet TUV alone makes the case for democratic voluntary coalition plus opposition at Stormont, such as is likely to evolve at Westminster."
Mr Allister also said the DUP had "over-hyped" its potential to have influence in a hung parliament, and criticised the DUP for allowing MPs to be MLAs at the same time.
The manifesto, entitled The Real Alternative, said there should be no further devolution of powers to Stormont.
It also called for the development of Belfast International Airport to be prioritised because of increasing competition from Dublin Airport
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The Traditional Unionist Voice has highlighted reform of Stormont and an early EU membership referendum as key policies in its manifesto.
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Eight hundred of the plants, as well as electrical equipment, were seized at a workshop in Millisle on Friday.
Police said it was one of the biggest and most sophisticated production operations they had uncovered recently.
Insp Andy Dunlop said there were "young plants, the remnants of a previous harvest, space for drying the product and space for waste products".
He added: "No arrests were made this morning but our enquiries will be continuing over the coming days."
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Cannabis plants worth an estimated £400,000 have been seized by police in County Down.
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Scientists found a single dose of the protein Hi1a worked on lab rats.
They said it showed "great promise as a future stroke treatment" but had not yet been tested in human trials.
The Stroke Association said the research was at its early stages but it would "welcome any treatment that has the potential to reduce the damage caused by stroke".
The researchers, from the University of Queensland and Monash University, travelled to Fraser Island in Australia to hunt for and capture three potentially deadly Australian funnel web spiders.
"We regularly collect spiders from Fraser Island off the south coast of Queensland," explained lead researcher Prof Glenn King.
"The reason for this is that funnel-web spiders dig burrows that can be as deep as 20-30 cm. Thus, digging them up from hard clay soils is very difficult. Fraser Island is a sand island which makes it easy for us to extract the spiders from their burrows."
The team then took the spiders back to their laboratory "for milking".
This involved coaxing the spider to release its venom, which could then be sucked up using pipettes.
Next the scientists dissected the venom gland of the spiders and honed in on a protein in the venom to recreate a version of it in their lab.
They then injected this Hi1a into the lab rats.
A stroke is a brain attack that happens when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off or there is bleeding on the brain
Source: Stroke Association
They found that the protein blocked acid-sensing ion channels in the brain - something the researchers say are key drivers of brain damage after stroke.
Prof King said the protein showed "great promise as a future stroke treatment".
"We believe that we have, for the first time, found a way to minimise the effects of brain damage after a stroke.
"Hi1a even provides some protection to the core brain region most affected by oxygen deprivation, which is generally considered unrecoverable due to the rapid cell death caused by stroke."
The research was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"My lab is interested in developing drugs for human nervous system disorders. Many of these disorders involve either dysfunctional ion channels (e.g. epilepsy) or over-active ion channels (chronic pain and stroke).
Thus, we are typically looking for molecules that modulate the activity of ion channels. The venoms of small venomous invertebrates such as spiders, centipedes and scorpions have evolved to target the nervous system of insects, and consequently they are absolutely full of ion channel modulators.
Because the human nervous system is more complex and wired differently to insects, ion channel modulators that kill or paralyse insects can actually be beneficial to humans. Thus, looking in venoms for ion channel drugs is not as weird as it seems."
Dr Kate Holmes, deputy director for Research at the Stroke Association, said: "We do not have an accurate picture of what happens in human brains from this research, therefore, it is currently unknown if this could be a successful treatment option for humans in the future.
"We welcome any treatment that has the potential to reduce the damage caused by stroke, particularly if this can benefit people who are unable to arrive at hospital quickly.
"Current treatments must be given in half this time period, and it is too early for us to know if this research can offer an alternative for stroke patients.
"We urge for stroke to be treated as an emergency - the sooner a person can get to hospital after a stroke, the sooner the right treatment can be received, which can improve survival and help recovery."
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A protein in spider venom may help protect the brain from injury after a stroke, according to research.
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Donald Trump says he would bring back outsourced manufacturing jobs from Mexico and China. There's a factory that is a symbol of outsourcing.
"You thought you had a job for life," says Gregg Trusty. "As long as you didn't show up to work drunk or punch your supervisor, you thought you could work there until you retired."
A wander around the factory Trusty is talking about gives a stark example of the precarious nature of the American economy today.
The gigantic Western Electric plant in Shreveport, Louisiana was once one of the country's biggest producers of telephones. Now it's abandoned, the machinery silently rusting. Nature creeps in on all sides. Dusty papers sit on desks and lights still blaze on to empty factory floors, as if the people working there were forced to leave in a hurry.
If you want to understand how Donald Trump has tapped into economic insecurity across America, this humid city of 200,000 in northern Louisiana is an excellent place to start. Western Electric was the wholly-owned manufacturing arm of corporate behemoth AT&T, which for most of the 20th Century held a monopoly on the US telephone business.
At its height, the company employed 7,500 people at its Shreveport plant. But long before the rise of Chinese competition, the ubiquity of the mobile phone and the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico - which Trump has called "worst trade deal ever" - the factory's future was clear.
Starting in the 1980s, AT&T slashed its domestic workforce and moved telephone manufacturing to Singapore.
"There was a feeling of disappointment," says Don Corliss, who worked at the plant for 25 years. "We moved from a manufacturing economy to a service economy.
"Did the average worker on the shop floor realise what was hitting them? I don't know."
Several factors led to the factory's closure. In 1984, a lawsuit ended AT&T's monopoly and opened up American telecommunications to competition. And, of course, the last 30 years have seen unprecedented international competition and technological change.
When Trusty moved here from the Midwest in the late 1960s he recalls that big celebrations would be held every time the plant added an additional 1,000 jobs, which in the early days happened every few years.
Later, as part of the company's public relations team, he would face the local media to announce round after round of layoffs.
"One time I was asked a question about how it made me feel," he says. "I told the reporter straight: 'We've lost some damn fine people today.'
"I meant it. It hurt, every time we did it. It was painful."
After years of job losses, the plant, located in the Southern Hills area of Shreveport, closed for good in 2000. The fortunes of the workers themselves varied. Many retired, while others shifted gears with the aid of generous redundancy packages and company-funded education grants. Trusty worked in other jobs in public relations and journalism. Other former employees became small business owners, consultants, care home workers - and in one case, an elected state politician.
Randy Doss started on the factory floor and later became a supervisor. After he left the company in 1995, Doss ran a local transportation business with his wife before retiring earlier this year.
"We all had a sense of security. We thought we were fine," he says. "And we all bit the dust."
Despite that, Doss says he holds no ill will towards the company.
"It's a business decision pure and simple, and they could make phones cheaper elsewhere. That's business."
In Shreveport the absence of manufacturing jobs is palpable. Another iconic American company, General Motors, shut its local factory in 2012. That set off a wave of job losses at local suppliers, and today there's little heavy industry left.
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Harold Sater of the Southern Hills Business Association says the area around the AT&T plant suffered for years and despite rows of busy restaurants, petrol stations and other small businesses nearby, it doesn't quite compare to AT&T's heyday.
"The traffic you see now is just starting to come back to the levels back then," he says.
There were knock-on effects. Richard Corbett, the business association's current president, says crime increased in the area - a trend he saw first-hand in his day job as a local sheriff.
"It's simple. Fewer jobs nearby means fewer people came to the area to shop," Corbett says. "That led to problems and we're still working through them today."
Yet Shreveport does seem different from those Midwestern cities that were strangled by loss of their main industries.
BBC Newsnight: Trump's appeal in Ohio
The economy here shifted and diversified. It's a regional centre for health care. Nearby oil and gas reserves have provided jobs, although that industry has gone through boom and bust. There's a large military base nearby and the city once had a thriving film industry lured in by tax breaks.
Meanwhile, casinos dotted along the Red River have led to a small revival downtown. The city's growth has slowed, but its population is stable - there's been no mass exodus.
Although most of the former AT&T site is abandoned, a couple of companies have moved in. One is even a small-scale manufacturer. Skyrunner is making futuristic recreational vehicles that can both drive and fly. The company is perfecting its designs and aims to ship its products around the world.
What's missing is big industry of the kind that provides that elusive path for the low- and semi-skilled workers.
"We're still working on getting good-paying jobs for those people," says Sater. "There's almost nothing that pays $15 an hour outside of work on oil and gas fields. That's frustrating."
AT&T, meanwhile, no longer manufactures telephones in Singapore or anywhere else. It's a technology and media company. Its latest move is a bid to buy Time Warner, a proposal that both Democrats and Republicans are concerned about.
Among the firm's former employers in Shreveport, faith in Trump and his economic plan is decidedly mixed. Some, like Corliss, say they'll vote for him but only because they dislike Hillary Clinton more.
Doss is a staunch Trump supporter. He says he believes the Republican candidate when he says he can bring back manufacturing jobs to the US, even though he's thin on specifics. For Doss, like for many Trump supporters across the country, voting for Trump is a leap of faith.
"I don't know how he's going to do it," Doss says, "but I think that he can."
Who is ahead in the polls?
45%
Hillary Clinton
45%
Donald Trump
Last updated November 4, 2016
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Horizon Nuclear Power propose to build and operate the Advanced Boiling Water Reactor design at Wylfa Newydd on the island.
Natural Resources Wales (NRW) and the Environment Agency will ask for views on their assessment of the design by Hitachi-GE.
The consultation ends on 3 March.
The public will have no influence on the technology used or the site location.
Tim Jones, NRW's executive director for north and mid Wales, said: "Our purpose is to ensure that the natural resources of Wales are sustainably maintained, enhanced and used.
"At Wylfa Newydd we will do this in three ways; assessing the design of the reactors, determining site specific environmental permits and providing advice to other organisations on decisions they need to make.
"It is our job to ensure that any new nuclear power station will meet high standards of environmental protection and waste management, ensuring that our communities are kept safe from environmental harm."
The first meeting takes place at David Hughes Hall, Cemaes, from 13:00 to 19:00 GMT.
A second will take place on Tuesday at the Ebeneser Centre, Llangefni, at the same time.
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The first of two meetings asking people's views on a new nuclear power station design will be held on Anglesey later.
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But more and more reports of shark attacks are making it into the news, begging the question: "Are South Africa's beaches safe?"
The footage of Australian surfer Mick Fanning being attacked by a shark, screened live at the weekend, has caused both intrigue and some panic.
Mr Fanning, a three-time world champion, was competing in the final of the J-Bay Open, an international surfing tournament in Jeffreys Bay in the Eastern Cape, when he escaped an attack by two identified sharks.
Zig Zag Surfing magazine editor Calvin Bradley witnessed the attack. He said: "When his turn came I saw the shark's fin appear from nowhere.
"Mick disappeared from where we could see him. We were expecting the worst when we saw that it was a shark."
Mr Fanning said he managed to punch the shark in its back and was rescued from the water by people on jet skis.
But experts say shark attacks in South Africa are uncommon.
"The last shark attack that happened in that area was in 2013," said National Sea Rescue Institute (NSRI) spokesman Craig Limbanon.
"We assist when there are incidents reported but this is not a common occurrence."
Prior to that, the last recorded attacks were in 2005 and 2011, according to the NSRI.
More than 40 of the country's beaches have repeatedly received blue flag status - an international award which looks at safety of beaches and how they are managed.
While the status of Jeffreys Bay - where Mr Fanning's attack happened - is not clear, it is considered a safe beach.
But Mr Limbanon says unlike other beaches where warnings are clearly visible, the beaches in this small town are not "properly marked".
The rules are that as well as fixed boards, warnings including coloured flags should be visible throughout the beach.
Mr Bradley said: "Surfers know that there are sharks.
"We know that there are risks and it can happen. It is not out of the ordinary.
"There are precautions though. For example, in Cape Town there are shark spotters that look out for any sharks during big contests and anytime.
"If they see a shark they will turn on a siren and call out to surfers and warn them of shark activity."
But he concedes: "I believe more shark spotters are needed in J-Bay."
According to Shark Attack Data, a website that monitors shark attacks around the world, there have been 500 incidents in South Africa since the 1900s, most of them unprovoked and not fatal.
The US and Australia had more than 1,100 incidents over the same period and surfing remains popular in both countries.
South Africa is home to more than 90 shark species, including the Great White.
The province of KwaZulu-Natal has introduced shark nets - large meshes placed several metres below the water to form of barrier between sharks and humans.
KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board is tasked with maintaining the safety equipment on 38 beaches.
It says the country's beaches are considered safe by international standards.
However, most of the country's beaches do not have shark nets, so people take this into account when going swimming, surfing, deep-sea fishing and even shark-cage diving - all popular activities here.
Flags are used at popular beaches to warn people of the presence of sharks
•If you see a green flag, it means the water is clear and no sharks have been spotted
•A red flag means that a shark has been spotted on that day, but spotters have lost track of it
•A white flag with a black shark means a shark has been spotted and it is no longer safe to be in the water
•Sirens will sound if a shark is spotted. If you are in the water when this happens, leave the water quickly but calmly
Source: South African Tourism
But shark nets are not a popular choice.
Environmentalists say they can pose a danger to the sharks - which sometimes get trapped in the wires. They also require regular maintenance.
Even with all the research done around the world, there is a lot of misinformation about why sharks attack humans but experts says that unlike in the famous Hollywood movie Jaws, shark attacks are not planned or even malicious - they are often chance interactions.
And for surfing magazine editor Mr Bradley that means "it is safe to get into the water but you always need to be careful".
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South Africa's coastline stretches over thousands of kilometres and is popular with beach-goers and surfers almost all year round.
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"One of these drinks has 20 teaspoons of sugar hiding in the can," says Ms Kellett, who goes on to tell the group why sugar-laden soft drinks are particularly bad for the teeth.
Apparently, it is to do with the way we sip them, which means they stay "high in the palate" and have a greater chance of causing tooth decay.
They have already heard about the dangers of diabetes and obesity, all part of a pitch to harden their resolve to complete the 21-day Gulp (Give Up Loving Pop)Challenge.
But for some of the 12- and 13-year-olds, the days ahead threaten to be quite tough, because these are young people who really enjoy their fizzy drinks.
"I love fizzy pop," says one pupil. "I drink near enough one can per day."
"I have a bottle of pop with my tea," says her friend.
"I usually have one at lunch as well, so I usually have more than I'm supposed to."
That is certainly true, as for most people over the age of 11, the recommended daily amount of sugar is 30g (1oz).
Some of the most popular soft drinks contain at least that amount per can, if not more.
In Blackpool, there is a particular issue, because more than a third of 10- and 11-year-olds in the town are overweight or obese - some of the highest rates in England.
And young people are also the biggest consumers of fizzy drinks.
It's a worry for Blackpool's director of public health, Dr Arif Rajpura.
"There is simply too much sugar in our diet, and this is contributing significantly to our obesity epidemic," Dr Rajpura says.
"So what we are trying to do is reduce the amount of sugar in our diet.
"Sugar in fizzy drinks is empty calories, it just adds calories, unnecessary calories, to our diet and what we're trying to do is cut that out."
Research suggests it takes 21 days to kick a habit or wean yourself off an addiction, which is how many of the group see sugar and fizzy drinks.
"It's like I've drunk it since I was young," says Shae, who drinks two cans a day.
"I don't know if it's going to leave me alone when I'm doing this challenge.
"It's going to be hard, but it's going to make me healthier as well."
Assuming there are 36g of sugar in a drink - the same amount found in one of the UK's most popular colas - each pupil would "save" 756g of extra sugar over the 21 days.
For the whole group, that amounts to 11.3kg of sugar.
Or to put it another way, they will have avoided putting an extra 45,360 calories into their bodies.
Three weeks later, when they are asked who managed to give up for the full 21 days, all but three hands go up - an 80% success rate.
Some say it was tough, some found it easier, but none says they are now going to give up fizzy drinks for good.
The school's senior assistant head teacher, Chris Ibbotson, says the timeframe has been too short to say if it has made a long-term difference, but she knows that more work will be needed.
"We've got influences from advertising and marketing that overwhelm adults as well as children," she says.
"It's a hard nut to crack.
"We also have to talk to parents about what they think, because they've been brought up in a similar way to the children, in using sugar as a reward, using sugar as a quick fix. And we do have to change."
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At Blackpool's St George's School, 15 pupils from Year 8 are sitting in a semi-circle as dental nurse Helen Kellett shows them some popular brands of fizzy drink.
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The ruling allows people to ask Google to remove some types of information about them from its search index.
But editorial policy head David Jordan told a public meeting, hosted by Google, that the BBC felt some of its articles had been wrongly hidden.
He said greater care should be given to the public's "right to remember".
Following the ruling, Google set up a form on its site allowing people to request which links should be taken down.
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) said links that were "inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant" should not appear when a specific search - usually a person's name - was made.
Google decided to notify affected websites each time a link had been removed.
The BBC will begin - in the "next few weeks" - publishing the list of removed URLs it has been notified about by Google.
Mr Jordan said the BBC had so far been notified of 46 links to articles that had been removed.
They included a link to a blog post by Economics Editor Robert Peston. The request was believed to have been made by a person who had left a comment underneath the article.
An EU spokesman later said the removal was "not a good judgement" by Google.
The list will not republish the story, or any identifying information. It will instead be a "resource for those interested in the debate", Mr Jordan said.
He criticised the "lack of a formal appeal process" after links have been taken down, noting one case where news of the trial involving members of the Real IRA was removed from search results.
"Two of whom were subsequently convicted," Mr Jordan explained.
"This report could not be traced when looking for any of the defendants' names. It seems to us to be difficult to justify this in the public's interest."
He suggested that Google implement some changes to the process of making a "right to be forgotten" request - such as requiring the identity of the person to be shared with the publication, on condition of confidentiality.
The meeting, hosted by Google chairman Eric Schmidt, is the latest of several that have taken place around Europe in the past two months. The next, on 4 November, will be held in Brussels.
However supporters of the ruling said the meetings were a "PR exercise" for Google - which would rather not deal with requests - rather than an open debate.
"They want to be seen as being open and virtuous, but they handpicked the members of the council, will control who is in the audience, and what comes out of the meetings," said Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin, head of CNIL - France's data protection body.
People keen to get data removed from Google's index must:
Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC
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The BBC is to publish a continually updated list of its articles removed from Google under the controversial "right to be forgotten" rule.
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Research by Inquest suggests at least nine young people have died in England as in-patients since 2010.
Health Minister Alistair Burt told BBC Panorama he didn't know the figure and is calling for further research.
The Department of Health has now accepted there have been at least four deaths.
Since the interview with Panorama, Mr Burt, the minister for community and social care for England, has issued a statement saying: "Panorama's investigation has unearthed questions about record-keeping and I'm seeking assurances from NHS England that they have the right processes in place for recording any such death and that lessons are learned."
The department also says it wants to meet Inquest to resolve the discrepancy in the figures.
Inquest director Deborah Coles said: "My fear is there could be more deaths. Neither we nor the Department of Health knows."
In a parliamentary answer last year, Mr Burt suggested there had been only one such death recorded by the Care Quality Commission. His predecessor, Norman Lamb, said there had been none.
The Department of Health says NHS England has recorded four deaths of young people "in an in-patient setting".
Inquest aims to support people bereaved by a death in custody or detention, including psychiatric in-patients.
Through their own casework and Freedom of Information requests, Inquest discovered at least nine young people have died in mental health units and the true number could be higher.
The only certainty is that current reporting of deaths is confused and incomplete. The NHS places nearly half of all its young psychiatric patients in private psychiatric units and these are not subject to FoI requests.
And the Care Quality Commission, cited by the the Department of Health as collecting accurate data, is only notified of the deaths of young people who have been committed to hospital or sectioned.
This omits the deaths of voluntary patients, who make up a large part of the hospital population.
Calling for statutory notification and an independent investigation when a child dies in a mental health unit, Ms Coles said: "How on earth can we learn if we don't know the true picture and circumstances?
"If a child dies in prison, an independent investigation follows automatically. There isn't that independent scrutiny given to these deaths."
Inquest says in the absence of any centralised recording of child deaths it analysed the responses to 238 Freedom of Information requests to NHS Trusts, private providers, local safeguarding children boards, local councils, the Department for Education, the Department of Health and the Care Quality Commission.
Ms Coles said: "What's been really shocking is how difficult it is to find the true picture of the number of children dying in psychiatric care."
Panorama - I'm Broken Inside: Sara's Story is broadcast on BBC One on Monday 11 April at 19:30 BST. Catch up on BBC iPlayer
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A charity for bereaved families is demanding the government investigates the way deaths of young people in mental health units are recorded.
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Abhishek Prasad was asked to play every time doctors "burnt" a circuit in his brain to treat what is commonly known as "musician's dystonia".
The condition causes painful spasms, twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal postures.
Mr Prasad told the BBC that he was able to play with ease after the surgery.
"By the sixth burn, my fingers opened up. I was normal on the operating table itself," Mr Prasad said after doctors removed the stitches on his head on Thursday, a week after his operation in the southern Indian city of Bangalore.
Dystonia had prevented Mr Prasad from moving his middle, ring and little finger of his left hand when he played the guitar.
"I thought the stiffness was because of over practice. I took a break and tried again and realised that there was no respite from the stiffness. Some doctors told me it was muscle fatigue and I was given painkillers, multi-vitamins, antibiotics, physiotherapy etc," he said.
He added that spasms in his fingers occurred only when he played the guitar.
But a neurologist correctly diagnosed nine months ago that he was suffering from dystonia.
"I was advised to undergo brain surgery, but I got scared. But my doctor, Sharan Srinivasan, gave me the confidence to do it," he said.
The musician said he vividly remembered every detail of the procedure.
He said the doctors fixed a frame with four screws on his head to cut open his skull before conducting an MRI scan.
"The scan helped in assessing how deep the electrodes could be inserted to correct the circuits inside the brain."
Mr Prasad added that he felt "like a generator was on during the operation", but felt "no pain".
Dr Srinivasan explained that "the patient does not feel pain because the operation was done under local anaesthesia".
He added that he made a 14mm hole and inserted a specialised electrode into the skull and the "target areas were 8 to 9cms deep inside the brain".
"He was fully awake all through, and the result was available on the operating table because his fingers had started moving normally on the guitar," he explained.
Mr Prasad said his "left hand and left leg felt a little weak now".
"But I will recover in a month's time and then begin full-fledged practice."
Dr Srinivasan said "live brain circuit surgery" in India was an important milestone.
"People with this neurological disorder usually feel depressed and confine themselves to a corner. These are the kind of patients we need to reach out to."
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An Indian musician played the guitar on the operating table to help doctors treat involuntary muscle spasms in his fingers.
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The claim: Foreign workers take away jobs from British workers and reduce their wages.
Reality Check verdict: Non-UK workers have no effect on the employment of UK-born workers, except during an economic downturn. Foreign workers may affect pay, especially for less skilled workers.
"I know a lot of people don't like to admit this - [for] someone who finds themselves out of work or on lower wages because of low-skilled immigration, life simply doesn't seem fair."
What can we say about the impact of immigration on the labour market?
There were 3.45 million non-UK citizens working in the UK, of whom 2.23 million were citizens of EU countries, according to the figures for April to June 2016 from the Office for National Statistics.
To put that into context, about 11% of the people working in the UK are non-UK nationals.
Are they taking away jobs from British workers?
This question was tackled earlier this year by Paul Johnson, from the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
He said that foreign workers do take jobs away from the domestic workforce in football's Premier League, where there are only 20 teams and so every player hired from other countries means there is one job fewer for a British player.
But the labour market as a whole does not work like that. More people in the country may mean there are more jobs.
At the moment, employment is at record levels and employment among UK nationals is also close to record levels.
Paul Johnson finds no evidence that foreign workers take away jobs from native Brits.
There was a report from the Home Office in 2014 that found that there was no effect on native-born workers from immigration when the economy was strong.
But it also suggested that there was an effect during an economic downturn if immigration was particularly high, and when that effect was seen it was on lower skilled individuals.
The second part of Mrs May's statement was about having wages depressed by immigrant workers, which is a question that Reality Check has looked into before.
The assertion that immigration has put pressure on wages is supported by a paper from the Bank of England last year.
It found that the area in which there had been the greatest effect on wages had been for semi-skilled and unskilled workers in the services sector, where a 10 percentage point increase in the proportion of immigrants working in the sector would be associated with a 1.88% reduction in pay.
A 10 percentage point increase in immigrants working in a sector is a lot.
The latest labour market figures from the Office for National Statistics estimated that between 1997 and 2016, the proportion of non-UK nationals working in the UK rose from 3.7% to 10.9%, an increase of 7.2 percentage points over 19 years.
Clearly, not all sectors of the economy and areas of the country are affected equally.
But it is also important not to see the impact of immigration as the only factor affecting wage levels and employment of British-born workers.
The impact of immigration is dwarfed by the effect of the strength of the economy and its growth.
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In her speech to the Conservative Party Conference this week, Prime Minister Theresa May appealed to people who had been hurt by immigration.
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The bank said firms were hiring at their weakest rate in six months, especially in the services sector.
But its chief economist Richard Ramsey said the private sector had "more momentum going into the second half of the year than it had a few months ago."
The bank conducts a monthly survey of companies' economic activity.
It tracks things such as new orders, employment and exports.
Mr Ramsey said the manufacturing, services and retail sectors "all reported robust rates of orders growth".
The export picture was also improving for the first time this year, even though the euro remains weak against sterling.
Ulster Bank said the Northern Ireland economy still faces challenges.
The chancellor's autumn spending revenue will have big implications for public sector spending.
"Looking ahead, the economic recovery is likely to experience more headwinds than tailwinds," Mr Ramsey said.
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Employment growth in Northern Ireland's private sector eased off in June, according to the latest snapshot of the economy provided by the Ulster Bank.
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On Wednesday, officers visited Ysgol Gymraeg Gilfach Fargoed, in Bargoed, Caerphilly county, and gave a lesson on equipment used by the force.
But instead of demonstrating a mock PAVA spray, which replaced CS spray, officers discharged a real canister.
The spray, used on eight pupils aged four and five, causes the eyes to close and is extremely painful.
None of them needed hospital treatment, said the force, which has apologised for the error.
"Parents were contacted by a senior officer to explain what happened, discuss any concerns and offer our sincere apologies," a spokesman said.
"Medical treatment wasn't required on the day, however, parents were advised to seek medical attention if they had any concerns.
"Further enquiries into the error are now being undertaken and, as a result of yesterday's incident, school liaison officers will no longer be taking any demonstration (mock) PAVA spray into schools."
PAVA (pelargonic acid vanillylamide) is a synthetic version of pepper spray. It replaced CS spray because it was said to be safer and more effective when restraining suspects.
It is claimed it is less likely to contaminate officers or bystanders.
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Children as young as four have been mistakenly sprayed with "hot chilli" by Gwent Police.
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It means the taxpayer now owns 7.99% of the bank, down from the 43% share it held following the lender's bailout at the height of the financial crisis.
Sales were suspended in January because of market volatility.
UK Financial Investments (UKFI), which manages the government's stake, said last month it would resume sales.
However, it abandoned plans for a share sale to the public, saying current market volatility meant the move was not sensible.
Instead, the government is now continuing to offload the holding to institutional investors.
UKFI sold another one percentage point worth of the bank's shares.
"Today's announcement shows the further progress made in returning Lloyds Banking Group to full private ownership and enabling the taxpayer to get their money back," Lloyds said in a statement.
The bank received £20.5bn in total from the government during the financial crisis.
The government has recouped more than £17bn of that money since UKFI began selling the stake off in 2013.
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The government has reduced its stake in Lloyds Banking Group to just below 8%, as it continues to try and return the lender to full private ownership.
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Lee Bo, who is a British citizen, was widely believed to have been abducted and taken to mainland China.
His disappearance last year with four other booksellers prompted an outcry and accusations that China had violated Hong Kong's judicial independence.
Mr Lee appeared on Chinese TV this month and denied being kidnapped. He gave Hong Kong police the same account.
The other booksellers also appeared on Chinese television, saying they were detained for "illegal book trading".
Hong Kong's missing booksellers and 'banned' Xi Jinping book
Lee Bo says he will abandon UK residency
1. Lui Bo, general manager, goes missing in Shenzhen, 15 October
2. Cheung Jiping, business manager, 32, goes missing in Dongguan, 15 October
3. Gui Minhai, co-owner, 51, goes missing in Thailand, 17 October
4. Lam Wingkei, manager, 60, last seen in Hong Kong, 23 October
5. Lee Bo, shareholder, 65, goes missing in Hong Kong, 30 December
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A missing Hong Kong publisher who sold books critical of China's leadership has returned to the city, police say.
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Scarlets will face Munster in the Pro12 final at Dublin's Aviva Stadium on Saturday bidding to win their first title since 2004.
Williams, who made his Scarlets debut in 2010, says the region have the strength in depth to be successful.
"We've always had a strong 15," Williams said.
"We've got boys competing and some boys are unlucky not to be involved or unlucky to be on the bench.
Media playback is not supported on this device
"But that's a good thing. You can't win trophies with 15 men and that's why we believe we can go all the way.
"We've got some really dangerous players who can create something out of nothing."
Scarlets secured their place in the final with a 25-17 semi-final win over Irish side Leinster, despite being reduced to 14 men after winger Steffan Evans was sent-off for a tip tackle.
Williams said they will take confidence from games where they had been under pressure and reserved particular praise for the forwards.
"We've come up against some of the biggest teams in Europe and come out on top," Williams added.
"We've got to give credit to our forwards.
"You can have any backline in the world but if you haven't got the forwards putting you on the front foot then there's no point."
Scarlets, Celtic League champions in 2004, lost to Ulster in the Pro12 play-off semi-finals in 2013.
Williams played in the defeat by Ulster and says Saturday's final against Munster is a big opportunity.
"We know there's a big challenge in front of us and we're looking forward to it," Williams said.
"When you get older you realise that there's less opportunities to win silverware.
"When the opportunities come round you've got to take them with both hands."
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Wales centre Scott Williams believes the current Scarlets squad is the strongest he has been involved with during his seven years at the region.
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About 400 drivers on the Piccadilly Line were planning to stage two 24-hour walk outs on Tuesday and Thursday.
The dispute is over concerns including driver and passenger safety and accusations around bullying of staff.
Mick Cash, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union, said "progress" had been made in talks.
However, he said the dispute was "not over yet" and discussions with London Underground (LU) would continue.
Tube operations director Pat Hansberry said talks had been "constructive... which have enabled us to reach an agreement on the way forward to resolve this dispute".
Hundreds of drivers took part in a previous strike in March.
The Piccadilly Line, which carries some 600,000 passengers a day, has some of the oldest trains on the network known as "1973 stock".
A train had to be taken out of service in January when a door opened while it was heading into a station.
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Planned strikes on a busy London Tube line that serves Heathrow Airport have been suspended to allow further talks to take place.
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Bill de Blasio said the relevant municipal agencies had backed the idea.
The bronze Fearless Girl statue was placed on 8 March to draw attention to gender inequality and the pay gap in the corporate world.
The statue - which has become an instant tourist draw - had been due to be removed on Sunday.
Appearing next to the 4ft-tall (1.21m) statue in Manhattan on Monday, Mr de Blazio said it "means so much to the people of New York".
The statue was "standing up to fear, standing up to power, being able to find in yourself the strength to do what's right", he added.
"She is inspiring everyone at a moment when we need inspiration."
The work, by artist Kristen Visbal, was commissioned by asset managers State Street Global Advisors (SSGA).
The company said the girl represented the future.
It added that one in four of the 3,000 largest traded US companies did not have even one woman on their board.
Wall Street's Charging Bull statue was originally guerrilla art by Italian-born artist Arturo Di Modica.
Installed in 1989, the bronze sculpture was meant to represent the "strength and power of the American people" in response to the market crash in 1987.
But it become a popular attraction and was allowed to stay.
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The globally popular statue of a young girl staring down Wall Street's iconic bull will stay in place until next March, New York's mayor has said.
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A blaze ripped through the building and destroyed the roof on 14 April.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the case had been discontinued against three men aged 18 and a 16-year-old girl.
At its height, 70 firefighters tackled the fire at the premises on Wilson Patten Street.
A CPS spokeswoman said the decision was taken after fresh evidence came to light.
She said: "New lines of inquiry are now being pursued by the police and the Crown Prosecution Service will review any new file of evidence on this case when it is brought to us by the police."
No-one was injured in the blaze at the former nightclub, which closed in 2010.
Mr Smith's was a regular setting for the ITV Granada show The Hit Man and Her, which was presented by Pete Waterman and Michaela Strachan between 1988 and 1992.
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Charges against four teenagers accused of arson at the former Warrington nightclub Mr Smith's have been dropped.
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Its mother was among the first group of 20 relocated to mid Wales from Scotland in 2015.
Pine martens were once common in Wales but were thought to be close to extinction by the 20th Century.
"Evidence of breeding in Wales is very exciting," said Hilary Macmillan from the Vincent Wildlife Trust, a mammal conservation charity.
"This is proving that they are breeding successfully in Wales."
The mother of the baby pine marten - also known as a kit - gave birth about a month ago, must have bred while in Wales to have become pregnant last year.
Others among the relocated group gave birth last year but they would have become pregnant after mating prior to their move south.
However, not everyone is please to see the animals return, with one landowner in Ceredigion dubbing the predator a "killing machine".
So far, 39 pine martens have been relocated to mid Wales in the last two years with a further 20 expected this autumn.
The kit was filmed by trust volunteer Huw Denman as it climbed a tree at its den site.
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The first pine marten born and bred in Wales as part of a recovery project has been caught on camera.
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Nine of the 12 journalists awaiting trial under Operation Elveden will not be prosecuted, after an urgent review.
The Society of Editors called the investigation and prosecution of journalists an "incredible fiasco".
But the director of public prosecutions defended the decisions to prosecute the journalists.
Duncan Larcombe, royal editor at The Sun, said the investigation and prosecutions had been "politically motivated" and "without justification".
Those who no longer face prosecution under Operation Elveden - the Metropolitan Police investigation into alleged inappropriate payments to police and public officials - include former News of the World editor Andy Coulson.
The CPS said it had decided to continue with the prosecutions of three Sun journalists; Jamie Pyatt, Chris Pharo and - in a separate case - Anthony France.
All three are accused of paying police officers. Seven public officials will also continue to face charges, the CPS said.
Mr Coulson faces a separate trial in Scotland - due to start next month - over allegations of perjury.
Those who will no longer face charges over alleged payments to officials are:
The announcement comes after three journalists were found not guilty of illegally paying public officials at London's Old Bailey.
Ex-Daily Mirror reporter Graham Brough and the Sun's Neil Millard and Brandon Malinsky were cleared of conspiring to commit misconduct in public office.
Sun reporter Tom Wells was also cleared of two counts. The jury was then discharged after failing to agree verdicts on a third charge against Mr Wells and one against ex-immigration officer Mark Blake.
The CPS has yet to announce whether it will seek a retrial on those counts.
BBC legal correspondent Clive Coleman said the practice of paying public officials for information had been largely ignored or tolerated "for decades" but the phone-hacking scandal had been a "game changer".
The Met Police has spent more than £11m on Operation Elveden, which last year had 56 dedicated officers and staff.
Police have made 87 arrests and interviewed 56 suspects under caution.
Dozens of those investigated have been journalists, 29 of whom have been charged. Of those, 13 have been cleared following trials.
But BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw said the Elveden strategy "started to unravel" in March, when four Sun journalists - John Kay, Geoff Webster, Fergus Shanahan and Duncan Larcombe - were acquitted.
The CPS launched its review of the outstanding Operation Elveden cases after the Court of Appeal last month ruled out a retrial of News of the World reporter Lucy Panton.
Lord Chief Justice Lord Thomas found the jury in her trial should have been directed that there must be serious harm to the public interest for an offence of misconduct in public office to be proved.
He also gave ex-News of the World reporter Ryan Sabey leave to appeal against his conviction.
Mr Sabey remains the only journalist to be convicted by a jury under Operation Elveden, although one other pleaded guilty.
Bob Satchwell, executive director of the Society of Editors, said Operation Elveden had been an "incredible fiasco" which had caused "huge reputational damage" to the British press and "even greater human costs" to journalists who had faced prosecution.
He said journalists had been "treated like drug dealers and terrorists" for offences which would have carried shorter sentences than the time they spent awaiting trials.
Mr Larcombe said the operation was "an affront to a democratic country".
He called for Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders and Met Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe to resign.
But Ms Saunders rejected suggestions the CPS had been too quick to charge the journalists
"This wasn't about whistle blowing, it was about public officials engaging in corrupt behaviour, selling stories over a period of time... I think we made the right decisions in accordance with the guidance that we had issued," she said.
The CPS said the Court of Appeal ruling about misconduct in public office cases would be reflected in updated guidance for prosecutors who have to decide whether suspects should face charges.
It said the fresh guidance would also be applied in five cases where suspects are currently under investigation and may face prosecution.
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Charges against nine journalists accused of making illegal payments to public officials have been dropped by the Crown Prosecution Service.
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Prices rose by 8.6% in England in the year to the end of January, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
In comparison, property prices went up by 0.1% in Scotland and 0.8% in Northern Ireland, and fell by 0.3% in Wales, over the same period.
Various surveys have suggested a pick-up in UK house prices after last summer's lull.
The ONS said that property price rises in England were driven by an annual increase in the South East of England (up 11.7%), London (up 10.8%) and the East of England (up 9.8%). Excluding London and the South East, UK house prices increased by 5.1% in the 12 months to the end of January.
Mark Posniak, managing director at Dragonfly Property Finance, said "England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland may be geographical neighbours but they could be thousands of miles apart in terms of house prices.
"London will remain a formidable bastion of the UK's property market but for many its prices are an insurmountable obstacle. With interest rates unlikely to rise this year and the employment market as strong as it is, demand will remain."
Average UK house prices increased by 0.9% from December to January, with the average home now valued at £292,000.
Campbell Robb, chief executive of housing charity Shelter, said: "Last week's Budget brought no hope for ordinary people looking for a place, to rent or buy, to call home that they can actually afford. It's time for the government to get serious, and invest in the genuinely affordable homes that we desperately need."
Chancellor George Osborne did announce the creation of a Lifetime Isa for those under 40 in April 2017. They will be able to save up to £4,000 each year into the Lifetime Isa, and receive a 25% contribution from the government each year, which can be used towards paying for a first home.
Various surveys record UK house prices on a monthly basis, but they all have slightly different methodology.
The house price index by the Nationwide Building Society is the quickest to be released. It uses an average value for properties after considering components such as location and size. The survey is based on its own mortgage lending which represents about 13% of the market.
A survey by the Halifax, now part of Lloyds Banking Group, is published a few days later. Lloyds is the biggest mortgage lender in the UK with 20% of the market and, like the Nationwide, uses its own home loan data.
Figures from the Land Registry are widely considered to be the most robust but are published much later than the lenders' data. It calculates the price change for properties that have sold multiple times since 1995. This survey only covers England and Wales.
A survey is of house prices in Scotland is published by the Registers of Scotland, using a simple average of house prices. The Land and Property Services assisted by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency produces a quarterly house price index in Northern Ireland.
The official UK statistical authority - the Office for National Statistics - is another well-regarded survey, used for reference by government. It offers a UK-wide regional breakdown. It draws on data from the regulated mortgage survey by the Council of Mortgage Lenders, so excludes cash buyers of property.
Housing market sentiment is reflected in the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) survey of some of its members.
Various other surveys include a Hometrack review of house prices in UK cities, and a Rightmove survey of asking prices.
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House prices have risen significantly in England in the past year in contrast to the rest of the UK, figures suggest.
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But the often fantastical narratives of Giambattista Basile, a 17th Century solider to the Doge of Venice, were not to have the fame and longevity of Shakespeare's, and his Tales would fade into obscurity.
That's something Italian film director Matteo Garrone hopes to correct with his own work of gothic imagination - a film version of Tale of Tales, starring Salma Hayek, Toby Jones, Shirley Henderson and Vincent Cassel.
Based on Basile's narratives of more than 50 different stories featuring kings, princesses, dragons, giants and magical beasts, Garrone has picked three and interwoven them: A pair of ageing sisters who long for their youthful beauty; a queen obsessed with the idea of having her own child and a king who marries off his only daughter to an ogre.
Garrone's previous works - the award-winning mafia film Gomorra and Italian TV satire Reality - have both been modern day Neapolitan stories grounded in the everyday, and he says he was delighted "to work on a fantasy film that lurches into horror".
"And it's not that we had to increase the horror for the sophisticated modern audience, it was all there in Basile's work," he says. "In terms of the fantastical, he was ahead of the brothers Grimm, Tolkein, or Harry Potter.
"What surprised me is that once we had chosen the Tales, we realised it involved three stories about women at different stages of life. And these tales are about contemporary obsessions: The desire for youth and beauty ends up with a horrific version of cosmetic surgery, centuries ahead of it becoming available."
Mexican actress Hayek, who plays a queen who will do anything in order to have a child, agrees: "All the conflict they go through is still relevant today, even if we are dressed in Baroque costume.
"In my case it's the desperation of a woman to experience motherhood, and the film takes that desperation and makes it grotesque. So a very recognisable human desire becomes something of horror, not only psychologically but visually."
For example, the film shows Oscar-nominated Hayek, solemnly eating what appears to be the beating heart of a sea monster - after a sorcerer tells her character it will make her pregnant.
It is, the actress agrees, a horrible sight; but as a mother and stepmother herself, she says she understands the desire for children.
"The real conflict of this woman, and the cleverness of the film, lies in the fact that she puts all her desire for happiness into one thing that lies outside herself. She is impossible to satisfy and that's why she suffers such tragic consequences," she says.
"Everyone in here suffers very harsh penalties for their obsessions," explains Toby Jones, who plays a king fixated by his new pet - a giant flea - and has to give his daughter's hand in marriage to a giant after losing a bet.
"Folk tales tend to be very dark and all fairy tales have darkness at their root, but these are particularly strange. Terrible deals are made in order to have wishes granted, and hard lessons are learned."
Jones, who recently appeared in the BBC TV series Sherlock, says he took the part in Tale of Tales "because I wanted to work with Matteo - and I like the idea of exploring a reversal between the parent and the child".
"The parent suffers terrible consequences and loses what he loves - his daughter - through an act of folly. It's very funny but there's something so awful and pathetic about it."
The actor's scenes involved embracing a gigantic flea, which he says "was not special effects - just this awful rubbery thing".
"I suppose for me, as the father of two daughters, playing this man has only reinforced the usual pitfalls that being a parent involves. The lesson is that it's easy to be distracted and there's a price to pay if you are," he says.
Although Tale of Tales was filmed in Italy, Garrone chose to make it his first English-language film with an international cast - a move he thinks now might have been a mistake.
"I didn't want to betray my country and my culture but at the same time, it has a larger audience in English," he explains. "And also, in my defence, they call Basile 'the Neapolitan Shakespeare' so I thought there was that connection. It was a very hard choice and I am still not sure if it was the right decision."
Despite the language issue, Tale of Tales has had widespread praise from international critics, with the Telegraph calling it "a fabulously sexy, defiantly unfashionable readymade cult item".
Hayek believes the film is "unfathomable in the sense it's more than a morality tale for human pride and indulgence - it's a lot more fascinating than that".
"Fairy tales are designed to change every time you re-tell it to a new generation. What makes me very pleased is that I think the spirit of the original Tales have been kept. I think Basile would be very happy."
Tale of Tales is released in the UK on 17 June.
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He's been called 'the Italian Shakespeare', and his main piece of work, The Tale of Tales, influenced modern fairy tale writers the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, as well as inspiring the story of Cinderella.
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Katie Redford was due to play the 14-year-old granddaughter of Gail McIntyre later this year.
Producers were led into believing the actress was 19-years-old. Her real age is 25.
A press release sent out by the ITV soap last week revealed Katie would take up the role in what she described as a "dream come true".
"It wasn't [Katie's] idea to audition as a 19-year-old," Katie's agent Joanne McLintock told Newsbeat.
"People in the industry do it regularly and she sort of went along with what we said.
"I'm feeling really stressed and so sorry for Katie. It's her first real job and she's a star in the making - she's a very talented young actress.
"I had to have a conversation with casting who said they were very disappointed. Katie is upset but she understands."
Katie was unavailable for comment.
It's thought producers of Coronation Street already have someone else in mind for the role.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
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Coronation Street has sacked the actress who was due to play Bethany Platt because she lied about her age.
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Politically, one of the most significant announcements alongside the Co-op Group's annual results is the publication of the motions to be put before the annual general meeting on May 16.
Now, this may all seem horrendously dull until you arrive at Motion 9: "political donations".
Effectively, the board is asking the members of the Co-operative Group (that's its customers) whether they want to continue financially supporting the Co-operative Party. Or any party for that matter.
The Co-op Party includes among its members a number of prominent Labour MPs including Ed Balls, Stella Creasy and Chris Leslie. They stand as candidates of both the Co-operative Party and the Labour Party, and the two political movements have strong historical ties.
Last year Co-op Group gave £625,000 to the Co-op Party, a figure that was already down on previous years.
The motion says: "To determine the Society's policy on Political Donations
The board has carefully not given a view. But it is interesting to note that the new Co-op chairman, Allan Leighton, did sign a letter backing Labour in 2001.
There is also what is called a Members Motion, put forward by those who support continuing political donations of up to £1m a year to "support the objectives of the co-operative movement".
If that is voted through, that would mean the Co-op Group would continue financial support for the Co-op Party.
It is a fascinating debate, which brings together the very different membership model of the Co-op Group and the correct financial balance between business and politics.
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The UK's biggest mutual organisation will vote on whether to stop financially supporting the Co-op Party, which has strong ties to Labour.
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Barry Beavis, 48, was sent a charge letter for £85 by car park operator ParkingEye after he overstayed a two-hour limit in Chelmsford in April 2013.
ParkingEye argued such charges were "a commercially-justified deterrent".
The Court of Appeal has dismissed the case though Mr Beavis, of Chelmsford, can refer it to the Supreme Court.
The three appeal court judges unanimously dismissed his challenge, saying the amount he was charged "is not extravagant or unconscionable".
After the judgement, Mr Beavis, who is considering taking his case to the Supreme Court - the highest court in the land - said: "I am absolutely furious that they have not upheld the law as it stands but have created new law."
ParkingEye argued the charges were justified to discourage people from over-staying at a site close to the railway station and law courts.
After Mr Beavis first refused to pay the £85 he received a court summons and was told the charge had increased to £150.
He challenged this last May at Cambridge County Court, where a judge ruled the £85 charge was lawful and did not breach the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations.
His challenge at the Court of Appeal was against the county court verdict.
Prof Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation, said it was "deeply frustrating" the case has gone against Mr Beavis.
The British Parking Association welcomed the court's judgement saying it "provided clarity on the use of contract law for parking on private land".
"Whilst the judgment does not appear to mention an upper limit, we would not expect our members to increase their charges as a result of this decision.
"The judgment at least confirms that their current charging is lawful and reasonable.
"Remember only a small minority of motorists fall foul of such conditions. Everyone can avoid these additional charges by complying with rules."
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A chip shop owner has lost his Court of Appeal challenge over what he claimed were "unfair, unlawful and disproportionate" parking charges.
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The man is in a critical condition after collapsing inside the Warehouse nightclub in Doncaster, police said.
Tablets, thought be a form of ecstasy, were found in his possession and witnesses said he took something.
A 32-year-old man was also taken to hospital but discharged after it was reported he took similar tablets.
Both men had been at the nightclub.
South Yorkshire Police warned anyone who bought tablets in Doncaster on Friday they may be dangerous.
The second man had also been in the Warehouse.
Det Sgt Andy Knowles said: "We believe these tablets may be some form of ecstasy, but this has not yet been confirmed.
"They may well be home made and could be extremely harmful."
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A warning has been issued over a batch of potentially dangerous pills after a 29-year-old clubber suffered a heart attack.
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The money from Wellcome will be used to establish a new research centre at the university.
Scientists at the centre will work to find drugs to treat "neglected" tropical diseases like malaria, tuberculosis and leishmaniasis.
The university said they were all diseases which caused hundreds of thousands of deaths each year.
They also disproportionately affect the poor and cost developing economies billions of dollars.
Professor Paul Wyatt, the director of the new Wellcome Centre for Anti-Infectives Research, said the funding was a "major boost" to research into "neglected diseases".
"It will also mean we can expand our international collaborations, catalyse new projects and provide resources to carry out drug discovery training for scientists from countries where these diseases are endemic," he said.
"There is an urgent need to find new treatments for these diseases, where there is increasing resistance to old drugs. We are at the forefront of this global effort to find new therapeutics and this award from Wellcome will further strengthen our efforts."
Last year, researchers in the drug discovery unit at Dundee announced the discovery of a new anti-malarial compound with has the potential to treat malaria patients with a single dose.
Wellcome's director Dr Jeremy Farrar said: "Wellcome Centres play a special role in the global research ecosystem. By creating places where researchers can flourish we can catalyse world-leading research and translation, and amplify its influence and impact.
"At Wellcome we believe in long-term support for discovery-driven science, and Wellcome Centres are an outstanding environment for researchers to further our understanding of fundamental biology, accelerate translation to clinical practice, and explore the social and cultural context of medicine."
The Wellcome award is part of a £118m investment in major research centres over the next five years.
The other Wellcome Centres in Scotland are at the University of Glasgow and the University of Edinburgh.
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The University of Dundee has been awarded £13.6m to tackle some of the world's most devastating diseases.
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Declan O'Brien capitalised on a mistake by Loughgall keeper Gareth Buchanan to put Glenavon ahead before the break.
Loughgall defender Richard Copeland was dismissed for a last-man foul on 52 minutes and Andy McGrory made it 2-0 from a penalty after he was fouled.
Stuart Mallon smashed in for the visitors midway through the second half but Glenavon held firm to progress.
The Lurgan Blues will meet the Premiership leaders in a Windsor Park semi-final on Saturday, 2 April.
Glenavon goalscorer Andy McGrory said: "We had Loughgall watched so we knew it wasn't going to be easy.
"I didn't think we were very good - Loughgall took the game to us despite only having 10 players and at times we looked like the team with a man less.
"But we're thankful to make the semis and we're really looking forward to it.
"Crusaders are a great team, but we're also a great side - we will go to Windsor with no fear."
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Glenavon edged Championship outfit Loughgall to earn an Irish Cup semi-final clash against Crusaders.
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But Lord Justice Pitchford said the force's "incompetence" and "failure" to plan for and anticipate the work involved were to blame for delays.
The inquiry was set up to investigate claims of wrongdoing by disbanded undercover units.
Campaigners say the cover names of former officers must be disclosed.
Activists who are taking part in the inquiry say the Met is "perpetuating secrecy" by refusing to disclose them.
They say people will not know if they were being spied on without this knowledge.
Addressing a preliminary hearing, Lord Justice Pitchford said the inquiry had wasted 12 months on the question of anonymity.
Despite this, the Met, which says it is working "tirelessly" to assess the risks of disclosing the names, has asked for more time to do so.
It has so far made decisions on only 18 out of 168 of the undercover officers.
The inquiry was ordered by the then home secretary, Theresa May, in 2015 but is yet to hear any evidence.
It is looking into the activities of the Met's top secret Special Demonstration Squad, which infiltrated protest groups for nearly 40 years until it was disbanded in 2008.
Undercover inquiry: The key allegations
Meanwhile, the Met was warned that unless it disclosed key documents it might be ordered to.
The campaigners say the Met has repeatedly tried to "stifle" the inquiry's effectiveness and prevent allegations of wrongdoing being made public.
But Jonathan Hall QC, for the Met, argued that the force should be given until October to finish the work - and denied it was trying to suppress material.
"It is not to conceal or delay, it is to ensure proper, informed, robust decisions are made," he said, adding that the Met had already spent £5m on the inquiry, with £10m forecast to be spent next year, and had 100 people working on it."
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The judge chairing a public inquiry into undercover policing has dismissed claims by campaigners that the Met police have tried to sabotage it.
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The Belgian club said they were in talks with the Blues over the 18-year-old's possible sale last month,
However, while Villas-Boas praised Belgian international Lukaku, he insisted the club did not need to strengthen their attack.
"To bring in another forward, at the moment I don't think we will," said the Portuguese.
We need to find the correct balance and this is why pre-season is important
"Lukaku had a magnificent season in Belgium. We are pondering every decision because we don't want to go into the market and make mistakes.
"We have plenty of availability in terms of forwards who can play in different positions - with [Nicolas] Anelka, with [Salomon] Kalou, Didier [Drogba], [Fernando] Torres and [Daniel] Sturridge.
"This is the reality at the moment of our squad. We need to find the correct balance and this is why pre-season is important."
Lukaku, widely regarded as one of the most promising talents in European football, would reportedly cost in the region of £18m.
The 6ft 4in frontman, whose contract runs out in 2013, is a strong and committed striker who is often referred to as 'the new Didier Drogba'.
Lukaku scored 15 league goals in 2009/10 to help Anderlecht win the Jupiler League title, while last season he scored 16 goals from 37 appearances as his side finished third.
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Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas has played down talk of a move for Anderlecht striker Romelu Lukaku.
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The X Prize was set up to push the boundaries of technology to solve issues such as climate change.
The winner, which will be announced at TED in 2020, will win $5m (£3.4m).
It will be awarded to the team that is deemed to have used artificial intelligence to solve one of the world's biggest problems.
Other X Prizes include one to put a robot on the moon, which was launched in collaboration with Google and one that aims to design a real-life health tricorder - a digital device that can scan the body and diagnose illness.
AI is often associated with dystopian visions of machines working against humanity and the new prize is partly to re-establish it as a technology capable of doing good.
Peter Diamandis, head of the XPrize Foundation, said that the rules and structure of the competition would be loose because it was such a fast-moving technology. What AI is used to improve will be left up to individual teams.
Every year leading up to 2020, teams will go head-to-head at World of Watson, IBM's annual conference, competing for interim prizes and the opportunity to advance to the next year's competition. IBM is jointly running the prize.
The three finalist teams will take the TED stage in 2020 to deliver talks demonstrating what they have achieved.
Ideas will be evaluated by a panel of expert judges for technical accuracy with the TED and X Prize communities choosing the winner.
More details about the competition will be made available in May.
Interested parties can pre-register at the X Prize website.
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A new X prize designed to advance artificial intelligence has been announced at the TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) conference.
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Food prices saw the biggest rise, particularly vegetables, but transport costs fell, the ONS said.
Annual inflation has been below the Bank of England's 2% target for two years, and last year it was zero.
The Bank said last month that it expected inflation to stay below 1% this year.
Other ONS figures published at the same time indicated that Chancellor George Osborne is close to missing his target for cutting the country's budget deficit in the 2015-16 financial year.
Government borrowing fell less than expected in February, coming in at £7.1bn, according to the ONS.
That brings the total deficit for the 11 months of the year so far to £70.7bn, as against the chancellor's full-year target of £72.2bn.
The borrowing figures mean the government can only borrow another £1.5bn this month if it is to avoid overshooting the forecast set by the Office for Budget Responsibility at the time of last week's Budget.
But all is not yet lost for the chancellor, because the OBR predicts he will be saved by revisions.
"We continue to expect borrowing to fall faster in February and March than over the year to date, although this may not be reflected fully in the initial outturn data due in April," it said.
This morning's ONS release revised down January's borrowing by £2.6bn, for example.
So even if next month's figure overshoots the forecast, we may have to wait a bit longer for confirmation.
Osborne 'boxed-in' by policy pledges
Budget calculator: How will it affect you?
"While there is gradual progress in reducing the deficit, the timetables outlined in the Budget last week remain too ambitious, and the return to surplus may take a bit longer than the chancellor hopes," said David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce.
"The difficulties in implementing some of the planned budget cuts will increase the problem."
Under the separate Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure, which includes housing costs, inflation was 1.3% in February, also unchanged from the previous month.
The ONS said the biggest downward pressure on the inflation rate came from the transport sector, with price changes for items such as road passenger transport, second-hand cars and bicycles.
Toothpaste and other personal care products also saw a fall in price.
However, higher prices for vegetables, milk, cheese and eggs made up for those declines.
Hotel accommodation and restaurant bills also saw increases, as did the price of furniture and household equipment.
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UK inflation as measured by the Consumer Prices Index was unchanged at 0.3% in February, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
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It comes with spending on so-called "out-of-region placements" forecast to run more than £600,000 over budget.
The social work department says it's already working to identify community-based provision wherever possible.
However, it added that establishing appropriate support for such services would take time.
It is hoped the move could replicate the success of a strategy put in place for "looked after kids" which is on course to deliver savings of almost £1m.
Jim Dempster, who chairs the social work committee, insisted it was in everyone's interest to tackle the issue.
"For the well-being of the children it is absolutely crucial that they are back in the region - they're amongst people they know in an environment they are familiar with," he said.
"And for us it represents a financial saving.
"That is just a win-win situation."
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Options are to be explored to try to avoid local children with disabilities having to leave Dumfries and Galloway for residential care.
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27 November 2013 Last updated at 15:30 GMT
A new study in Nature Communications has found that the shape of the seahorse's head means it can move through the water without making large ripples.
It means the creatures they eat are not tipped off that they are there until it is too late.
The seahorses were filmed catching prey under a microscope which gave scientists a much better understanding of how they hunt.
To their victims, seahorses are more like sea monsters, says Brad Gemmell from the University of Texas at Austin.
"The seahorse is one the slowest swimming fish we know of, but it's able to capture prey that swim at incredible speeds."
"People don't often think of seahorses as amazing predators, but they really are."
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Seahorses might not be the fastest swimmers but they are very good at sneaking up on their prey.
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Ukad is looking into claims by former Team Sky rider Jonathan Tiernan-Locke to BBC Sport that controversial painkiller Tramadol was "freely offered" at the road world championships in 2012.
British Cycling, the national governing body, has put the allegation to the medic in question, doctor Richard Freeman, on the BBC's behalf, who has denied it.
Separately, it is understood Ukad is also looking into an allegation in the Daily Mail that a medical package was delivered to Team Sky by a British Cycling coach in France on 12 June, 2011.
It is claimed the alleged delivery was said to have been made on the day Sir Bradley Wiggins won the Criterium du Dauphine in La Toussuire.
Team Sky said they had conducted an internal review and were "confident there has been no wrongdoing".
Wiggins has previously denied any wrongdoing before a major race.
"We informed British Cycling of the allegation and asked them to contact Ukad, who we will continue to liaise with," they said.
British Cycling says it has not identified the substance in the package.
It also released a statement which said: "British Cycling can confirm there is an ongoing Ukad investigation with which we are cooperating fully. We are unable to comment further at this stage."
A spokeswoman for Ukad said: "UK Anti-Doping is investigating allegations of wrongdoing within cycling. In order to protect the integrity of the investigation, we will not comment further."
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In an interview with BBC Sport, Tiernan-Locke also says Team Sky's stance in allowing Wiggins to take a banned drug to treat his asthma has tainted the outfit's image.
Wiggins was granted a therapeutic use exemption (TUE) to take anti-inflammatory drug triamcinolone before the 2011 Tour de France, his 2012 Tour win and the 2013 Giro d'Italia.
Tiernan-Locke, who rode for Team Sky until he was sacked for a doping violation in 2014, said the matter of Wiggins' TUEs "definitely looks odd".
Wiggins' use of the substance has come under scrutiny following revelations made by computer hackers known as the Fancy Bears, who are thought to be from Russia.
The cyber-espionage group accessed the private medical data of some of the world's leading athletes from the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada).
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Wiggins' TUEs were approved by British authorities, and cycling's world governing body the UCI. There is no suggestion either the 36-year-old or Team Sky, his former team, have broken any rules.
Questions have been raised over why Wiggins apparently did not need the drug before 2011, or after 2013.
But Team Sky boss Sir Dave Brailsford has defended his former rider, saying the medication was recommended by a specialist and that Team Sky "do not cross the line" over performance-enhancing drugs.
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UK Anti-Doping says it is investigating allegations of wrongdoing in cycling.
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The core consumer price index (CPI) was flat from a year ago, stripping out the effect of last year's sales tax increase in April.
The last time the core CPI did not rise was in May 2013, when it was flat.
The latest figures are moving further away from the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) inflation target of 2%.
The headline core CPI, which includes oil but not fresh food prices, rose 2% from a year ago, just below market expectations of a 2.1% rise.
Japan's economy came out of a recession in the fourth quarter of last year, but its recovery remains fragile on sluggish household and business spending.
Economists said the data put more pressure on the central bank to expand its monetary policy as falling oil prices keep inflation subdued.
But analysts do not expect the BOJ to add to last year October's stimulus plans until the second half of this year, because officials had been anticipating the cooling inflation.
Other data, such as household spending falling 2.9% in February from a year ago while retail sales were down 1.8%, also highlighted the struggle policymakers face in steering the economy towards a recovery.
The unemployment rate, however, fell to 3.5% in the same time period - close to what economists see as full employment.
Jasper Koll, head of research at JP Morgan, viewed the data as "good deflation" saying that the good news was prices in Japan were coming down while wages were going up.
"Last year wages rose at around 1%. This year we just had the union negotiations and it looks like wage growth is going to double to about 2% - so there's more nominal yen into the pockets," he told the BBC.
"So a feel-good factor is starting to come back and that's what's going to generate a domestic demand recovery."
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Annual core consumer inflation in Japan, the world's third-largest economy, stopped rising for the first time in nearly two years in February.
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6 December 2016 Last updated at 09:59 GMT
The app can now identify up to 70,000 public figures by looking at images, video or an actual person.
The BBC's Rory Cellan-Jones raised privacy concerns with the company's co-founder Omar Tayeb.
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Augmented reality app Blippar has been updated to recognise faces as well as objects.
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The messages labelled "racist, misogynistic and homophobic" were posted in a chat app and revealed on Bwog, a student-run blog.
A statement from the university described the messages as "appalling".
The university has been at the centre of a debate on how colleges handle sexually aggressive behaviour.
"Seeing that dialogue happening behind closed doors with our classmates and our peers was very, very shocking," Claire Fry, a student at Columbia, told the New York Times.
The university said that the wrestling team would not compete "until we have a full understanding of the facts on which to base the official response to this disturbing matter".
The revelation comes weeks after Harvard University suspended its men's soccer team following a report in the student newspaper that players made sexual comments about members of the women's team.
It said students were rating the attractiveness of female players as well as using sexually explicit comments.
James Fast, a student, who is Bwog's publisher, said he was encouraged by the university's quick response and its investigation, including its decision to cancel the wrestling team's participation in its first match, the New York Times reports.
The recent revelations are at the milder end of what has been dubbed US college "rape culture".
Banners regularly appear at the beginning of the academic year bearing slogans such as: "Rowdy and fun. Hope your baby girl is ready for a good time".
Studies have found that members of US college fraternities are three times more likely to commit rape than other male students while members of sororities were 74% more likely to experience sexual assault.
Past scandals include an email sent around one fraternity entitled "Luring your rapebait" and fraternity members chanting "No means yes".
The most recent case involved a Stanford University swimming champion who sexually assaulted an unconscious female student before being jailed for six months - a term condemned by many as too short.
Will Stanford sexual assault case silence future victims?
BBC Pop Up: Fraternity culture and stopping college rape
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Columbia University has suspended the men's wrestling team after lewd text messages allegedly sent by several of its members surfaced.
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Twelve-week-old Lexi climbed into the insulation cavity in the wall of a house in Witton Gilbert near Durham in May.
Firefighters and the RSPCA spent two-and-a-half hours cutting it free.
It was not known where the kitten came from and there was no response to posters. It has been rehomed with Gaynor Capp and her son Thomas, eight, in Durham.
Ms Capp said: "She's really lovely and such a friendly, playful cat.
"She's got into the habit of sitting in my bathroom sink and drinking the running water, or sitting on the kitchen bench and lapping up the water."
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A kitten trapped inside a wall for three days has been found a new home.
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After a goalless first half, Hull's Abel Hernandez rounded Jason Steele for his 16th league goal of the season.
Uruguay striker Hernandez then turned provider as he set up Mo Diame to double the advantage from close range.
Blackburn's best chances saw Elliott Ward's tame effort cleared off the line by Andy Robertson and Ben Marshall's fierce shot saved by Allan McGregor.
Steve Bruce's Tigers have now won five of their six league matches in 2016 and moved two points clear of Middlesbrough, who face Leeds at Elland Road on Monday.
Rovers have not won in the league since a 1-0 victory against Rotherham on 11 December.
Paul Lambert's men have scored just 25 goals this season, and having sold their top scorer Jordan Rhodes to Boro in the January transfer window, they once again lacked any fluency in the final third.
Chuba Akpom could have made the scoreline even more convincing for Hull, but fired just wide from distance in injury time, as Blackburn slipped to 19th in the table.
Blackburn manager Paul Lambert:
"In the first half there wasn't much in it. The disappointing thing for me is we had the ball twice and Hull have scored two goals.
"We secured possession and made wrong decisions, and they're a good side. The front two are a handful and they've still got a lot of Premier League players in their side.
"Today I thought once the second goal went in, we looked far short. You can't play the way we did last week and then turn in that performance.
"It will drive you mad. We have to find consistency quickly, really quickly."
Hull manager Steve Bruce:
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"We've missed two or three chances late on which could have improved our goal difference but we thoroughly deserved the win in my opinion.
"I thought we were playing within ourselves in the first half and I wanted us to go and express ourselves and take the shackles off.
"We knew we had more in the tank and I thought in the second half we gave a very good performance where we could have scored three or four.
"That's as good as we've played for a long time."
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Hull City moved top of the Championship with victory at Blackburn Rovers, who are now winless in nine games.
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Baggies head coach Tony Pulis is desperate to strengthen his squad this month to build on an encouraging first part of the Premier League season.
He failed to land Schneiderlin, who has joined Everton from Manchester United, and also missed out on Leicester's Jeff Schlupp, now at Crystal Palace.
Midfielder Livermore, 27, joined Hull in an £8m deal from Tottenham in 2014.
Pulis is a long-time admirer of Livermore and tried to sign him when he was Palace manager.
He is understood to be encouraged that Livermore only made the bench for Hull's victory over Bournemouth on Saturday.
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West Brom have made a bid of about £10m for Hull's Jake Livermore after missing out on Morgan Schneiderlin.
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The Local Government Association (LGA) wants legislation brought in to make sure lorry drivers in England and Wales use a GPS system suitable for HGVs.
It wants councils to have the power to ensure drivers avoid routes where they exceed the weight or height limit.
On Monday, a lorry crashed into a bridge near Birmingham, ripping the roof of its trailer off.
Calls to change navigation systems come after a number of lorries have got stuck in narrow roads or under low bridges.
In September last year a lorry was driven over a bridge in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, causing it to be closed for several months. It was more than 10 times over the bridge's weight limit.
Network Rail is asking drivers of high vehicles to heed "low bridge" warning signs after the same bridge in Hinckley, Leicestershire, was hit 11 times in 12 months.
Commercial GPS systems designed for lorries include information on bridge heights and narrow roads.
They also allow lorry drivers to enter their vehicle dimensions to ensure they are instructed to follow a suitable route.
Police forces in Wales and Greater London already have the power to enforce weight and height restrictions on HGVs but councils are urging the government to roll this out across England.
Some councils have been working with freight and haulage companies to ensure drivers are using the most suitable routes.
The money raised from the new powers could be put towards fixing potholes, says the LGA.
LGA transport spokesman, Martin Tett, called upon the government to "start taking this issue more seriously".
Despite most lorry drivers being reputable, Mr Tett said some rural communities were "fed up" with the few who ignored the restrictions.
"It is common sense that all lorry drivers should use sat-navs designed for trucks, but this is only going to become a reality when it is a mandatory requirement. We are talking about a very small extra cost to drivers," he added.
An AA spokesman said it was down to the council to ensure that warning signs were clearly visible.
He said: "If a particular road has a particular problem then it is up to the local authority to come up with the signage to deal with that.
"And obviously if the lorry or any other road user contravenes that road order and that signage then they are open to a penalty."
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Lorry drivers should be banned from using sat-navs specifically designed for cars, council chiefs have said.
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The 28-year-old lightweight was hit by a concrete slab as he tried to apprehend burglars in Manchester.
"I'm 100% certain I'll be back. I honestly think I can be ready for May, late May," said Crolla.
His injuries forced him out of a WBA world title bout against Cuban Richar Abril, 32, who will now face Liverpool's Derry Mathews in March.
Crolla, who has won 29 of 35 professional fights, admits he faces some big challenges before he can guarantee a return to the ring.
"The sparring is the thing I need to be careful with," he added.
"I'll probably need brain scans even before I return to sparring.
"Because I've gone through this and suffered this bit of heartache, I'll be even more focused than before."
Promoter Eddie Hearn said Crolla was "lucky to be alive" following the attack in Chadderton, Greater Manchester.
He needed a plate and pin in his ankle and 12 stitches in a head wound.
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Anthony Crolla is targeting a comeback in May after fracturing his skull and breaking his ankle in December.
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Police said the offences related to incidents at Whinmoor Children's Home in the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
A 76-year-old from Leeds has been charged with 17 counts of indecent assault and four other sex offences.
An 82-year-old from North Yorkshire has been charged with two counts of indecent assault and one other sexual offence.
Both are due to appear at Leeds Magistrates' Court on 12 June.
Police said the men were arrested as part of an ongoing investigation into abuse at children's homes in Leeds.
Eleven other men have been arrested as part of the inquiry and released on bail.
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Two men have been charged with child sex abuse dating back more than 50 years at a children's home in Leeds.
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Rooney's second league start of the year was one of eight changes made by United manager Jose Mourinho after Thursday's Europa League win over Anderlecht.
The England captain started the impressive counter-attack which led to Anthony Martial's opener, and squeezed the ball home from a tight angle to double United's lead before half-time.
Andre Gray had Burnley's best chance of the first half when his shot was blocked by defender Eric Bailly, but Sean Dyche's side failed to register a shot on target.
It means United remain fifth in the league but are only a point off rivals Manchester City, whom they face on Thursday at Etihad Stadium.
Burnley have now won only once in 11 matches and are five points off the relegation zone in 16th.
After season-ending injuries to striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic and defender Marcos Rojo, Mourinho was forced to shuffle his pack again.
And, with one eye on the Manchester derby, he left Thursday's hero Marcus Rashford on the bench.
Martial returned to the attack alongside Rooney and Jesse Lingard and played a part in both first-half goals.
The Frenchman sprinted forward after being sent on his way by Rooney, and after a delicate lay-off from Ander Herrera, Martial swept the ball past Tom Heaton in the Burnley goal.
It was Martial's 25th goal for the club and a clause in his contract, which he signed last year, means United will now have to pay an extra £8.5m to his former team Monaco.
Rooney became Manchester United's all-time record goalscorer in January against Stoke but has been made to wait three months for goal number 251.
He completed a full 90 minutes of league action for the first time since September and enjoyed a productive partnership with Martial.
Having played a part in United's opener, Rooney scuffed home the second goal of the match from a few yards out after Martial's shot was well blocked by Heaton.
It crept over the line, and goal-line technology confirmed it was legitimate, although it may have taken a slight deflection off the leg of Burnley defender Michael Keane.
Burnley have a home record to be proud of this season, with 32 of their 36 points won at Turf Moor.
But they are still without an away win, and that has contributed to their now precarious league position.
The Clarets certainly started the better side against United, but lacked finesse in the final third.
Other than Gray's effort in the first half, their most productive spell came in the final 10 minutes when Keane headed across goal from a free-kick and substitute Daniel Agyei placed his right-footed snap-shot past the post.
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Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho: "I'm very happy. It's not easy to win here and it's even harder to be in control and we were in control for 90 minutes.
"We understood the way they play and we played against their strengths. I think it was a great result that we deserved."
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Burnley manager Sean Dyche: "They are very strong, tactically, technically and with game knowledge. We huffed and puffed and stuck at it. They scored two poor goals from our point of view, we have to make a foul on the first one.
"I am pleased with the mentality of the second half. They killed the game. That is the reality of playing some of the top sides. You can't always get above where you are."
Burnley travel to Crystal Palace in the late kick-off next Saturday (17:30 BST) while Manchester United make the cross-city trip to Manchester City on Thursday (20:00 BST)
Match ends, Burnley 0, Manchester United 2.
Second Half ends, Burnley 0, Manchester United 2.
Attempt missed. Daniel Agyei (Burnley) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Robbie Brady.
Attempt missed. Daniel Agyei (Burnley) left footed shot from the left side of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Robbie Brady.
Attempt blocked. Robbie Brady (Burnley) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.
Substitution, Manchester United. Michael Carrick replaces Paul Pogba because of an injury.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Delay in match Paul Pogba (Manchester United) because of an injury.
Attempt missed. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left. Assisted by Wayne Rooney.
Jeff Hendrick (Burnley) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Attempt missed. Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left.
Paul Pogba (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by James Tarkowski (Burnley).
Eric Bailly (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Daniel Agyei (Burnley).
Foul by Marcus Rashford (Manchester United).
Michael Keane (Burnley) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt missed. Marcus Rashford (Manchester United) right footed shot from the right side of the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Henrikh Mkhitaryan.
Paul Pogba (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by James Tarkowski (Burnley).
Substitution, Manchester United. Henrikh Mkhitaryan replaces Anthony Martial.
Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) is shown the yellow card.
Foul by Paul Pogba (Manchester United).
Matthew Lowton (Burnley) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Substitution, Burnley. Daniel Agyei replaces Ashley Barnes.
Offside, Burnley. Johann Berg Gudmundsson tries a through ball, but Andre Gray is caught offside.
Daley Blind (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Ashley Barnes (Burnley).
Substitution, Manchester United. Marcus Rashford replaces Jesse Lingard.
Anthony Martial (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Stephen Ward (Burnley).
Attempt blocked. Ashley Barnes (Burnley) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Robbie Brady.
Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Joey Barton (Burnley).
Matthew Lowton (Burnley) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Matthew Lowton (Burnley).
Hand ball by Wayne Rooney (Manchester United).
Substitution, Burnley. Johann Berg Gudmundsson replaces George Boyd.
Corner, Burnley. Conceded by Daley Blind.
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Wayne Rooney scored his first goal since January as Manchester United kept up the chase for the top four in the Premier League with victory at Burnley.
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The White House said similar activities had been seen before the nerve agent Sarin was allegedly dropped on rebel-held Khan Sheikhoun in April.
Dozens of people were killed, prompting President Donald Trump to order a missile strike on a Syrian airbase.
Syria's government denies it is preparing a chemical attack.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has previously said the Khan Sheikhoun incident was fabricated.
On Tuesday, Pentagon spokesman Capt Jeff Davis said activity had been spotted at the Syrian army's Shayrat airfield, from where the US says jets departed before the Khan Sheikhoun incident.
"This involved specific aircraft in a specific hangar, both of which we know to be associated with chemical weapons use," Capt Davis said.
In a statement on Monday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said the US had "identified potential preparations for another chemical weapons attack by the Assad regime that would likely result in the mass murder of civilians, including innocent children".
He added that if "Mr Assad conducts another mass murder attack using chemical weapons, he and his military will pay a heavy price".
The White House provided no supporting evidence or further explanation.
US media had reported that the state department and Pentagon were caught off-guard by the statement, suggesting they were not consulted in advance, but the White House later said all "were involved in the process from the beginning".
The US permanent representative to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, also warned Russia and Iran - Mr Assad's allies.
"Any further attacks done to the people of Syria will be blamed on Assad, but also on Russia & Iran who support him killing his own people," she tweeted.
The Associated Press news agency cited a non-governmental source with close ties to the White House as saying that the US had received intelligence that Syrian government forces were mixing precursor chemicals for a possible Sarin attack in either the east or south of the country.
More than 80 people were killed in Khan Sheikhoun on 4 April, according to the local opposition-run health directorate.
Video posted following the alleged air strike showed people struggling to breathe and foaming at the mouth - symptoms consistent with nerve agent poisoning.
President Assad's close ally, Russia, said an air strike had hit a rebel depot full of chemical munitions and released toxic agents into the air - a claim that rebel factions and the Western powers which back them have dismissed.
The Organisation for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) has said tests on samples collected from victims indicated that they were exposed to Sarin or a Sarin-like substance.
President Trump cited the pictures of children in distress as one of the reasons he had decided to reverse previous US policy on Syria and launch a direct attack on Shayrat airbase days later.
At the time, Capt Davis, the Pentagon spokesman, said Shayrat was used to store chemical weapons, and that US intelligence assessed that aircraft from there had dropped bombs filled with a nerve agent on Khan Sheikhoun.
The very public warning to the Syrian government against using chemical weapons is highly unusual. Such a step , which must surely be based upon detailed intelligence, might usually be delivered behind the scenes through diplomatic channels.
The use of chemical weapons requires tell-tale preparations such as the movement of particular units, the distribution of weapons to a base from which they can be delivered and so on, all capable of being picked up by US satellites or drones.
The warning is clearly intended to forestall such an attack and to make it clear that if the Syrian regime again crosses this line - just as it did last April - the US will respond with force.
This time though the context is very different. There is growing friction between the US and pro-Assad forces. A US strike now would risk Washington being drawn further into the conflict. But the warning from the White House is crystal clear.
Speaking to AP on Tuesday, Ali Haidar, the Syrian minister for national reconciliation, dismissed the US allegation.
Russia, meanwhile, said it considered "such threats against the Syrian leadership to be unacceptable".
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov criticised the White House's use of the term "another" chemical weapons attack, pointing out that there had been no independent investigation of the Khan Sheikhoun deaths.
President Assad has denied ever using chemical weapons and maintains that the country's entire arsenal was destroyed as part of a deal brokered by the US and Russia after a deadly Sarin attack on rebel-held suburbs of Damascus in 2013.
The latest development comes amid increasing tension between the US and Russia, which recently warned the US-led coalition fighting so-called Islamic State that it would view its aircraft as targets after a Syrian military jet was shot down.
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The US says Syria's government appears to be preparing for a chemical weapons attack and has warned that it will "pay a very heavy price" if one takes place.
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The count is a compulsory requirement for the zoo to keep its licence.
The information collected is shared with zoos around the world via the International Species Information System and is used to manage worldwide breeding programmes for endangered animals.
In 2015, 17,480 animals and 756 species were counted.
In 2015, the zoo welcomed many new arrivals including the world's first zoo-bred Lake Oku clawed frogs.
A spokesperson for the zoo said: "The 14 tadpoles were a real cause for celebration as these totally aquatic frogs, native only to Lake Oku, in Western Cameroon, Africa, are some of the most genetically unusual creatures in the world, having developed extra chromosomes throughout their evolution."
Edward the two-toed sloth was born in July and Gernot, a male Western-lowland gorilla, was born to 22-year-old mum Effie in November.
Gernot is the second offspring of silverback Kumbuka and increases the size of the troop to six gorillas.
A lively litter of 11 African hunting dog puppies also saw the pack more than treble in size.
But zookeepers had to say goodbye to Partula snails. They were reintroduced to their native Tahiti in 2015 to save the species from extinction.
While for some keepers the task is simple, others use imaginative tactics to account for every creature.
Tiny insects like ants are counted in colonies, but all others are recorded individually.
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Thousands of animals at London Zoo are being counted as zookeepers begin their annual stock-take.
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The bid, in shares and cash, was called "highly opportunistic" by Gareth Davis, chairman of William Hill, who said it did not reflect its true value.
The deal would create the UK's third-largest online betting group with revenues of £2.7bn.
William Hill shares have risen 22% to 334p since 888 said last month that it was considering a joint bid with Rank.
The bid would mean 888 taking over Rank, with the newly formed company then buying William Hill.
Mr Davis said that it would involve some £2.2bn in debt. He said: "It is a very complex three-way combination at a low premium involving substantial risk for William Hill shareholders: execution risk, integration risk and risks of materially increased leverage."
The offer of 364p a share to William Hill shareholders is made up of 199p in cash and 0.725% per share in the new company, BidCo.
But Rank and 888 argue that its business plan would increase the company's value to up to 408p a share - or £3.6bn.
888 and Rank said that they see "significant industrial logic in the combination, through consolidation of their complementary online and land-based operations, delivery of substantial revenue and cost synergies, and from the anticipated benefits of economies of scale which will accrue to all shareholders."
William Hill said that it was already seeing a turnaround in its own online business, and while a merger would give it access to 888's offshore markets it replied that it was already seeing growth of 12% in its Australia operation and 49% in operating profits in the US.
William Hill tried and failed to acquire 888 in a £700m offer last year.
John Colley, a Professor of Practice at Warwick Business School said the bid "looks particularly opportunist as William Hill have lost their chief executive James Henderson after two years of disappointing performance with the shares at a lowly 336p compared with the 364p offer.
"However William Hill is now in play and others may be along with improved offers and more cash.
"The industry is consolidating rapidly and William Hill, Rank and 888 will be part of that one way or another. For this reason, Rank and 888 should also watch out."
Other mergers in the industry include Ladbrokes and Coral signing a £2.3bn merger in July and Paddy Power and Betfair joining forces in September.
Earlier this month William Hill reported a 1% rise in revenues in the first half of the year, saying that strong demand during the Euros football tournament had offset poor online sales and what it called "the worst Cheltenham results in recent history".
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Bookmaker William Hill has rejected a £3.16bn takeover offer from online operator 888 and casino giant Rank.
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It was not that MPs did not trust the government's assessment of the threat posed by Syria, as chemical weapon use had been proved, he told BBC Radio 4.
The former prime minister added he was disappointed the UK would not be taking part in military action.
And he "disagreed" with Labour leader Ed Miliband, who helped defeat the government in a Commons vote last week.
A Labour source rejected Mr Blair's analysis, saying the lessons the Labour leader had learned from Iraq was the importance of avoiding an "ill-judged and reckless rush to war".
But former cabinet minister Ben Bradshaw has said many Labour MPs felt "uneasy" that Britain's options had been limited after last week's vote.
Writing in the Guardian, the former culture secretary blamed David Cameron for "petulantly" ruling out direct intervention immediately after losing the vote.
But he also expressed alarm that Mr Miliband was following the prime minister's lead rather than taking a "sensible and measured approach".
"We were not voting to support Britain taking part in immediate military action, but nor were we voting to rule it out completely. Neither were most Conservatives or Liberal Democrats," said Mr Bradshaw.
In a message on Twitter, Labour former deputy prime minister Lord Prescott said: "I've always respected Tony Blair but he's wrong on Syria and Ed is right. Tony seems to have become a champion for regime change."
Explaining his opposition to Mr Miliband's stance, Mr Blair told Radio 4's What Syria Means For Britain. "This is something where I just have to disagree with the leadership of the party.
"I know it's a difficult position for political leaders to be put in when they've got to take decisions like this, but my position on these issues is pretty clear over a long period of time."
In last Thursday's debate, Mr Cameron told MPs: "The well of public opinion has been well and truly poisoned by the Iraq episode."
But, echoing Mr Blair, he said Syria was not like Iraq, because "the fact that the Syrian government have, and have used, chemical weapons is beyond doubt".
Explaining his reasons for backing military action, Mr Blair said not acting in Syria would be "dangerous" as it would "send a signal" that chemical weapons could be used without a "robust response".
Without foreign intervention, he warned "you will have a [President Bashar al-]Assad-dominated state, and that means in this instance an Iran-dominated state, probably around the borders of Lebanon and controlling most of the wealth of Syria".
"And then you'll have a larger geographical hinterland to the east that will be controlled by various Sunni [Muslim] groups, most of whom are likely in these circumstances to be extreme, and you could have a breeding ground for extremism actually much worse and much more potent than Afghanistan."
He added: "It is an issue to do with the difficulty we encounter afterwards, and that is a really really important lesson.
"The truth is, the reason why Iraq makes us hesitant is because Iraq showed that when you intervene in the circumstances, where you have this radical Islamist issue, both on the Shia [Muslim] side and the Sunni side, you are going to face a very difficult, tough conflict."
There was a "fundamental battle about religion and politics within Islam", he said, which "has vast consequences for our future security".
The UK and the US should support "the majority of people in the Muslim world [who] in fact want religion in a sensible place in politics, not trying to dominate politics", he said.
Mr Blair, now Middle East envoy for the Quartet of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia, said the Commons vote would have an impact on US-UK relations.
"What the long-term implications of that are depends on future actions," he said.
Former Lib Dem leader Sir Menzies Campbell, who opposed the Iraq war in 2003, questioned Mr Blair's analysis.
"Mr Blair's contention that public disquiet in the UK in relation to military action against Iraq can be put down to the aftermath of military action is undermined by three facts.
"First, the military action was justified on the basis that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction which were a danger to the UK, which was just plain wrong.
"Second, that the war against Saddam Hussein was illegal and contrary to the UN charter.
"Third, that the intelligence presented to Parliament and public was couched in such a way as to fit our policy decision already taken wholly contrary to principle.
"The aftermath certainly didn't help public perception but it was not the only compelling reason for public disillusionment."
It comes as David Cameron announced a further £52m in UK aid for victims of the civil war in Syria.
It will bring the UK's total spending on aid for Syria and neighbouring states to £400m.
What Syria means for Britain will be broadcast on Monday evening at 20:00 on BBC Radio 4.
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Tony Blair has said the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq has made the UK "hesitant" to intervene in Syria.
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A joint statement raises concerns that continuing austerity measures pose a risk to public services.
In a letter to the Treasury, the ministers call for a meeting ahead of the forthcoming spending review.
The Treasury said it would continue to engage with devolved administrations in the lead-up to the review.
The joint statement on spending has been issued by Scotland's Deputy First Minister John Swinney, Arlene Foster of the Northern Ireland Executive and Jane Hutt of the Welsh government.
The letter to the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Greg Hands, states: "The three devolved administrations share the view that the UK government's ongoing austerity plans, reflected in both the in-year spending reductions announced on 4 June and in the Summer Budget, continue to reduce public spending in the UK too fast and too far, and present unnecessary risks to our public services.
"We also share the view that the UK government's plans were developed and communicated in an unsatisfactory way, with neither advance notice nor apparent consideration of the implications for the devolved administrations."
They also raise concerns about the timing of the spending review expected in the autumn.
Mr Swinney said: "The UK government's broken austerity programme is reducing household income, damaging economic confidence and weakening public finances. That represents a clear threat to our public services."
A Treasury spokeswoman said Mr Hands met regularly with the finance ministers of the devolved administrations.
She added: "The government's long-term economic plan is working: Britain was the fastest growing economy in the G7 in 2014 and 2015 and the deficit has been more than halved.
"However it is still too high - at just under 5%, it is one of the highest in the OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] - and it is no surprise to anyone that the government has clear plans to deal with it.
"The spending review will set out the savings needed for the country to live within its means."
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The finance ministers of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have warned that UK government spending cuts are moving "too fast and too far".
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The Gunners' offer - reported to be £6m - was rejected by Wanderers and criticised by their boss Owen Coyle.
In addition, Trotters chairman Phil Gartside re-posted a message on Twitter from a Bolton fan angered by the bid.
"That number is completely wrong," said Wenger. "If Gartside can say I am lying I am ready to confront him."
The Frenchman added: "I believe every negotiation is between two parties and you only have to sell the player if you are all right with the price.
"In this case the information is below what has been spoken about.
"You can believe Gartside or you can believe me. It's not right. It's not the truth.
"The truth is that we never speak about our negotiations.
"If a club doesn't want to sell a player it can keep him. When we sign a player we come out here and tell you and keep the price a secret.
"They do not need to sell the player, they can keep him. If you ask do I want to buy your house and you are not happy with the price you say no, that's it.
"Why should you feel insulted? I don't understand. If the player is not for sale they can keep him. I don't understand the problem.
"If we want to buy the player we buy the player. I do not have to explain for how much."
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On Friday, in response to Arsenal's bid for England international Cahill, Bolton manager Coyle said: "When I make an offer for a player, I'd like to think it's in the right ball park.
"But this wasn't even close. I'm only passing it on as a third party, but the word derisory doesn't even cover it."
In June Coyle said he was resigned to losing the 25-year-old centre-back - who joined them from Aston Villa and is now in the final year of his contract - this summer.
Arsenal have a raft of injury problems, and defenders Laurent Koscielny and Sebastien Squillaci both missed the club's Champions League qualifying win at Udinese on Wednesday.
The transfer window closes on 31 August.
Arsenal have received nearly £60m for the sales of Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri this summer, and manager Arsene Wenger insists the money that has come in is available for him to buy new players.
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Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has reacted angrily to suggestions from Bolton that his bid for their defender Gary Cahill was "derisory".
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The incident happened at about 17:00 local time on Friday.
The injured man was taken to Naas General Hospital where he later died.
The teenagers were detained on Saturday. A man in his 40s, who was arrested on Friday, remains in custody.
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Two teenagers have been arrested after a man died following a shooting in Athy, County Kildare.
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Cummings was in the right place at the right time to convert David Gray's cross for his first.
And the 21-year-old rolled in an opportunistic second from a tight angle when he capitalised on a mix-up in the Buddies' defence.
New signings Andrew Shinnie and Brian Graham both came off the bench to make their debuts for Hibs.
Graham in particular had a brilliant chance to score his first goal for the Leith side but Saints goalkeeper Scott Gallacher blocked the effort.
Former Buddie John McGinn cracked the angle of post and cross-bar late on and any critics of Cummings would say the forward should have gone home with a hat-trick ball.
His double here brought his tally for the season to five already, and the deflected cross from energetic captain Gray only needed a left-foot steer into the net.
Being in the right place to capitalise was key for Cummings, and 10 minutes later his persistence at pestering St Mirren defender Jack Baird and keeper Gallacher was rewarded.
The St Mirren duo left a back-pass to each other and Cummings nipped in to clinically score from a tight angle.
Lennon's managerial effect from the sidelines is clear. Fifteen minutes into this match the former Celtic boss was berating Hibs centre-back Darren McGregor for a lack of urgency.
Players paid attention to Lennon's demands to "move it quickly" and "get it forward".
Cummings received an earful for a poor second-half pass and Marvin Bartley was rebuked for moaning at the referee. Lennon has got his team by the scruff of the neck.
St Mirren's home form under Alex Rae has been better than his predecessors but there was not much for the locals to get excited about on this occasion - indeed some booed at half-time.
Baird watched his header sail over and substitute David Clarkson shot narrowly wide, but the impression was Hibs had another gear in them if required.
Hibs boss Neil Lennon: "Jason Cummings is a goalscorer but there's more to his game.
"He got two brilliant goals and could've had a couple more. I thought he got sloppy in the second half and looked a little bit tired.
"If you'd been watching him in the first half you could have had Real Madrid on the phone. But if you'd been watching him second half you would've had Accrington Stanley on the phone - and that's no disrespect to Accrington."
St Mirren manager Alex Rae: "The fact is that we dug in and competed in the second half.
"You can't legislate for that second goal. No matter what the preparation is, it's just a miscommunication and it becomes difficult because you're chasing the game.
"We need to stick together as a team and get through this."
Match ends, St. Mirren 0, Hibernian 2.
Second Half ends, St. Mirren 0, Hibernian 2.
Andy Webster (St. Mirren) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Brian Graham (Hibernian).
John McGinn (Hibernian) hits the bar with a right footed shot from outside the box.
Attempt missed. Andrew Shinnie (Hibernian) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the right misses to the right.
Corner, Hibernian. Conceded by Jason Naismith.
Attempt saved. Brian Graham (Hibernian) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal.
Jordan Stewart (St. Mirren) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Jordan Stewart (St. Mirren).
Dylan McGeouch (Hibernian) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Attempt missed. Stephen Mallan (St. Mirren) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right.
David Clarkson (St. Mirren) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Darren McGregor (Hibernian).
Substitution, Hibernian. Martin Boyle replaces Jason Cummings.
Attempt missed. Brian Graham (Hibernian) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the right.
Attempt saved. David Clarkson (St. Mirren) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Attempt missed. Andrew Shinnie (Hibernian) right footed shot from outside the box is too high.
Foul by Kyle Hutton (St. Mirren).
Dylan McGeouch (Hibernian) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by David Clarkson (St. Mirren).
Marvin Bartley (Hibernian) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Gary Irvine (St. Mirren).
Jason Cummings (Hibernian) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Substitution, Hibernian. Brian Graham replaces Grant Holt.
Substitution, St. Mirren. Jordan Stewart replaces Lawrence Shankland.
Attempt saved. David Gray (Hibernian) header from the right side of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal.
Andy Webster (St. Mirren) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Andrew Shinnie (Hibernian).
Substitution, St. Mirren. David Clarkson replaces John Sutton.
Substitution, Hibernian. Andrew Shinnie replaces James Keatings.
Foul by Gary Irvine (St. Mirren).
Jason Cummings (Hibernian) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Gary Irvine (St. Mirren).
Jason Cummings (Hibernian) wins a free kick on the right wing.
James Keatings (Hibernian) hits the bar with a left footed shot from outside the box.
Attempt missed. Jack Baird (St. Mirren) header from the centre of the box is close, but misses the top right corner.
Gary Irvine (St. Mirren) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by David Gray (Hibernian).
Kyle Hutton (St. Mirren) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
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Jason Cummings' brace against St Mirren helped Hibernian continue their perfect start to the Championship season.
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Napper was linked to a series of rapes and attempted rapes in a south London parkland, known as the Green Chain, but was cleared for being "too tall".
He went on to kill Rachel Nickell in 1992 and Samantha Bissett and her four-year-old daughter Jazmine in 1993.
Napper pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility in December 2008.
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Serial rapist Robert Napper was brought to the attention of Metropolitan Police as early as 1989, but a series of "bad errors" allowed the 42-year-old to slip the net, a report by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) found.
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The Toomebridge rider won by 0.23 seconds from James Ellison in the third race after finishing third in race two.
Carrickfergus man Glenn Irwin ended his Supersport campaign by coming in third in the feature race to finish fourth in the standings.
Josh Elliott secured another Supersport 1000cc victory as the champion from Fermanagh ended the season on a high.
Alastair Seeley, the Carrickfergus rider who was Elliott's closest challenger for the title, was forced out after five laps.
Laverty was ninth in the Superbike opener on his Tyco BMW before a third and first left him fourth in the series.
Superbike champion Josh Brookes won the opening two races on the English circuit.
Portadown's Marshall Neill finished ninth in Saturday's Supersport sprint race, in which Irwin was an early retirement.
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Michael Laverty clinched his first British Superbike win of the season in Sunday's final race at Brands Hatch.
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The Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service said the blaze started in the living room of the property at about 16:30 GMT on Friday.
Three crews of fire fighters rescued the man and treated him at the scene.
He was initially taken to Craigavon Area Hospital but later transferred to the Royal Victoria in Belfast.
An investigation into the cause of the fire is ongoing.
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A man is in a critical but stable condition after being rescued from a fire at a flat in Culdee Street in Armagh.
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The Division One leaders added 128 runs in just 19.4 overs as Toby Roland-Jones smashed 66 and James Franklin made 56 not out before declaring on 536-9.
Facing a first-innings deficit of 332, Durham then slipped to 252 all out.
Spinner Ollie Rayner impressed once again, claiming 5-85 to finish with match figures of 9-102.
Middlesex are now 35 points clear of second-placed Somerset, who have a game in hand, and are almost certain to extend their advantage over Yorkshire in third, whose Roses match against Lancashire is heading for a draw.
It was another day of complete dominance for the hosts at Lord's as they reached their highest score against Durham, surpassing the 511 made at the same ground in 1994.
Roland-Jones and skipper Franklin put on exactly 100 for the eighth wicket in just over an hour in the morning - Roland-Jones hitting six fours and four maximums in his 47-ball knock.
Durham opener Keaton Jennings top scored in their second innings with 45 to become the first batsman in the country to pass 1,000 Championship runs, but the visitors never looked close to making Middlesex bat again.
Durham's own hopes of winning the title now look to be fading as they sit 40 points behind Middlesex with five matches remaining, but with a game in hand on the leaders.
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Middlesex moved a step closer to their first County Championship title since 1993 as they thumped Durham by an innings and 80 runs inside three days.
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Only migrants who plan to seek asylum in the country, or those with clear humanitarian needs will be allowed entry.
In reaction, Serbia said it would close its borders with Macedonia and Bulgaria to those without valid documents.
The future of the EU's passport-free Schengen zone is already in doubt.
Eight of its members, including Austria, Hungary and Slovakia, have tightened border controls, leaving thousands of migrants stranded in Greece.
Europe is facing its biggest refugee crisis since World War Two. Last year, more than a million people entered the EU illegally by boat. Most of them were Syrian, fleeing the country's civil war.
Slovenia, which is an EU member, has been used as a transit country by migrants trying to reach Germany and other northern European states.
But Slovenian Prime Minister Miro Cerar said on Tuesday the Balkan route was now effectively "shutting down".
He said the restrictions, which came into force at midnight local time (2300 GMT), were part of a wider initiative which would see other Balkan countries, as well as Greece and with the cooperation of Turkey, turn back "all irregular migrants".
The EU and Turkey are considering a radical plan including proposals to return to Turkey all migrants arriving in Greece. For each Syrian sent back, a Syrian in Turkey would be resettled in the EU.
The UN expressed concern at the plan on Tuesday, while Amnesty International called it a death blow to the right to seek asylum.
Speaking to the BBC, Thorbjorn Jagland, Secretary General of the Council of Europe, said the proposal to send migrants back would contravene international law.
The deal, discussed at a summit in Brussels on Monday, has not been finalised and talks will continue ahead of an EU meeting on 17-18 March.
Doubts over deal - analysis by Damian Grammaticas, BBC News
European leaders are billing their new proposal to deal with the refugee and migrant influx as a "game-changer", but the scheme is not agreed yet and there are doubts about whether it it is practical or even legal.
The centrepiece is a plan to take any refugees and migrants who cross the sea to Greece in smugglers' boats and return them, directly, to Turkey.
EU officials say whatever is finally agreed "will comply with both European and international law". Privately, though, some admit that, while the assessment of their lawyers is "quite promising", there are legal hurdles that must be overcome.
After Slovenia announced new restrictions, Serbia's interior ministry said it would act accordingly.
It said it had been informed that Slovenia would not receive migrants without valid visas and passports.
"Bearing in mind that the new regime is implemented by a member of the European Union, Serbia cannot afford to become a collection centre for refugees," it said in a statement.
It said Serbia, which is not a member of the EU or the Schengen agreement, would "harmonise all measures with the European Union and apply them reciprocally in its southern and eastern borders".
Under the EU's Dublin Regulation, asylum seekers have to lodge claims in their EU country of arrival. However the bloc is said to be considering adopting a centralised system for processing applications instead.
More than 2,000 migrants, mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, continue to arrive daily in Greece from Turkey.
Some 14,000 migrants are stranded around Idomeni on Greece's border with Macedonia after Macedonia closed its border to almost all.
The EU heads said "bold moves" were needed, and made the following proposals:
A note on terminology: The BBC uses the term migrant to refer to all people on the move who have yet to complete the legal process of claiming asylum. This group includes people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria, who are likely to be granted refugee status, as well as people who are seeking jobs and better lives, who governments are likely to rule are economic migrants.
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Slovenia has introduced new border restrictions for migrants as part of efforts to close the Balkans route from Greece to Western Europe.
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A Chinese statement issued during a visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry said the nuclear issue was the "shared responsibility of all parties".
Mr Kerry said the two sides must decide "very quickly" how to proceed.
North Korea has recently threatened nuclear attacks, and is feared to be preparing a missile launch.
A flurry of warlike statements from Pyongyang has prompted speculation that a launch could happen on 15 April, when the country marks the 101st birthday of the nation's founder and former leader, Kim Il-sung.
By Damian GrammaticasChina correspondent
After weeks of rising tensions, and North Korea's threats of nuclear war, the diplomatic efforts to tackle this crisis are gathering pace.
The pledge to work with the US is a clear signal of China's displeasure with North Korea. China is North Korea's only ally, and is not going to stop supporting the North, but wants it to calm things down.
The question is will North Korea listen? In recent weeks the North's regime has made clear it now views having nuclear weapons as vital to its survival.
It has said explicitly that it won't bargain them away.
North Korea has reportedly moved at least two Musudan ballistic missiles to its east coast, but on Saturday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted officials in Seoul as saying that no new movement of the mobile launchers had been detected for two days.
US officials including Mr Kerry have been playing down a leaked Pentagon report which warned that Pyongyang could have developed the technology to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile.
Since the UN imposed fresh sanctions on North Korea in February, its leadership has promised to restart a mothballed nuclear reactor, has shut an emergency military hotline to South Korea, and has urged diplomatic staff to leave, saying it cannot guarantee their safety.
The North says it has also been angered by joint US-South Korean military exercises.
Though its rhetoric has been more bellicose than usual, analysts say it fits a long-standing pattern, and may be intended to boost the popularity of Kim Jong-un, who came to power last year.
In Beijing Mr Kerry held talks with President Xi Jinping and Foreign Minister Wang Yi. In comments to Mr Xi, he said the world was facing "a critical time with some very challenging issues".
Among them were Korean tensions but also "the challenge of Iran and nuclear weapons, Syria and the Middle East, and economies around the world that are in need of a boost", he said.
He later issued a statement saying the US and China were able "to underscore our joint commitment to the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner".
He said the two sides would have "further discussions to bear down very quickly with great specificity on exactly how we will accomplish this goal".
Missile defences in the region
North Korea's missile programme
The statement was issued after talks with Yang Jiechi, China's top diplomat.
Mr Yang said China was "firmly committed to upholding peace and stability and advancing the denuclearisation process".
"To properly address the Korea nuclear issue serves the common interests of all parties. It is also the shared responsibility of all parties," he said.
China is North Korea's only ally and major trading partner, but has grown increasingly frustrated with its growing belligerence.
Even so, the BBC's Damian Grammaticas reports from Beijing that persuading China to up the pressure on North Korea will not be easy.
China might be frustrated by Pyongyang's behaviour but it is still the North's lifeline, so Beijing is unlikely to cut vital supplies of food and fuel since it feels that may make the North even more desperate and unpredictable, our correspondent adds.
Following meetings in the South Korean capital, Seoul, on Friday, Mr Kerry said no country had a closer relationship with Pyongyang than China.
Noting that Beijing, like Washington, wanted denuclearisation on the peninsula, he added: "If that's your policy, you've got to put some teeth into it."
He warned North Korea against any missile launch, saying it would be a "provocation and unwanted act" which would further isolate North Korea and its people who, he said "are desperate for food, not missile launches".
But he also said the US had tried to tone down its own statements, and cancelled some military exercises.
"I think we have lowered our rhetoric significantly and we are attempting to find a way for reasonableness to prevail here," he said.
Mr Kerry is on a four-day trip to Asia, and travels to Tokyo on Sunday.
Russia has also expressed growing concern over North Korea and said on Friday that it had issued "an urgent appeal" to Pyongyang "to refrain from actions which could lead to further escalation of tension".
Some estimates suggest that the missiles North Korea has moved to its east coast could travel 4,000km (2,500 miles), although it is not believed that the Musudan has been tested before.
That would put US bases on the Pacific island of Guam within range.
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China and the US have vowed to work together to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear programme and to settle tensions through dialogue.
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The attack on a rebel-held town brought furious international reaction, with the US and other powers blaming the Syrian government for the deaths.
Officials in Damascus deny using any such weapons.
The attack will overshadow a conference in Brussels at which 70 donor nations will discuss aid efforts in Syria.
Delegates want to step up humanitarian access for thousands of civilians trapped by fighting.
Syria's civil war has raged for more than six years with still no political solution in sight.
Nearly five million Syrians have fled the country and more than six million are internally displaced, the UN says. More than 250,000 people have been killed.
Wednesday's emergency meeting of the UN Security Council was called by France and the UK as international outrage mounted over the suspected gas attack on Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib province on Tuesday.
The Russian defence ministry gave its version of events on Wednesday, saying a Syrian air strike had hit a rebel ammunition store that included "a workshop for the production of land mines filled with poisonous substances".
It seemed to support accounts by Syrian military sources a day earlier who reported an explosion at what they called a rebel chemical weapons factory in Khan Sheikhoun.
Earlier, Britain's ambassador to the UN, Matthew Rycroft, said the incident was "very bad news for peace in Syria".
"This is clearly a war crime and I call on the Security Council members who have previously used their vetoes to defend the indefensible to change their course," he told reporters in New York.
Footage from the scene showed civilians, many of them children, choking and foaming at the mouth.
Witnesses said clinics treating the injured were then targeted by air strikes.
UK-based monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll at 58, including 11 children.
It was unable to say what chemical was involved but pro-opposition groups said it was believed to be the nerve agent Sarin.
In a statement, US President Donald Trump condemned what he called "these heinous actions" by the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson accused the Syrian government of "brutal, unabashed barbarism".
UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said it was a "horrific" attack and that there should be a "clear identification of responsibilities and accountability" for it.
Syria has denied its forces caused the deaths and Russia, which is supporting the government, said it had not carried out any air strikes in the vicinity.
The BBC's Lyse Doucet in Brussels says the attack could prove a stumbling block at Wednesday's international conference.
The EU hopes to use the prospect of funds for reconstruction as a bargaining chip in the faltering peace talks, our correspondent says, but the latest developments will deepen the opposition of those who say now is not the time to discuss financial support for areas controlled by the Syrian government.
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The UN Security Council is to hold emergency talks after a suspected chemical attack in Syria left dozens of civilians dead and wounded.
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The 46-year-old has assisted Southgate for the past three years in his role as England Under-21 boss.
Holland will be England first-team coach alongside his Chelsea job.
Leicester assistant coach Craig Shakespeare, who was part of the England set-up, has left in the wake of manager Sam Allardyce's departure.
"The FA will maintain close ties with the highly regarded Leicester City assistant moving forward," read a statement from the Football Association.
Allardyce left his post on Tuesday after being filmed by undercover reporters apparently offering advice on circumventing the Football Association's player ownership rules. He said he was "deeply disappointed" to leave his job, adding that "entrapment has won".
Sammy Lee will continue as England assistant manager with Martyn Margetson remaining as goalkeeping coach.
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Chelsea assistant first-team coach Steve Holland has joined interim England manager Gareth Southgate's backroom staff.
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However, the overriding sentiment seemed to be that of disappointment at a decision to leave the union which has guaranteed their right to travel, work and settle within the UK.
Polish national Dr Judyta Szacillo, who has been living and working in Belfast for almost 11 years, expressed sadness at the outcome.
"I know some in the Polish community were in favour of Brexit, but for me and my friends, it feels, in a way, like losing a part of our identity," she said.
"Yes, we have our home country, but we have made Northern Ireland our home too, and it's devastating to think our two countries will no longer be united within the European Union.
"This is not just about economics - on an emotional level it's very symbolic for us.
"It feels like half of the UK are basically telling us they don't want us here.
"Thankfully, my good friends in Northern Ireland and my colleagues don't make me feel like that, but it hurts that others do."
Dr Szacillo now plans to apply for UK citizenship.
"It's been in my mind for years as something I want to do, but it never felt urgent. Now things have changed and as soon as I get the £1,000 I need to apply for it, I'll do it."
Dominic Janssen, a German project manager in the the pharmaceutical industry, who is married to a Northern Ireland woman and settled in Belfast, described the result as "a step back in time to a more separate, darker Europe".
"Europe has been working together for unity for decades after the 1940s," said Mr Janssen.
"Growing together and working together felt like building a better, more prosperous, and peaceful world in Europe.
"The UK was a strong partner for Europe. It felt very personal to me because if this had happened seven years ago, I may never have been able to move here.
"In the pharmaceutical company I work for, a significant number are not from the UK and we trade a lot with European clients.
"Foreign nationals make a valuable contribution to the company I work for and I hope the result from today will have no impact on this."
Greek national Fotis Papailias has lived and worked in Northern Ireland for 10 years. An economist who lectures in finance at Queen's University in Belfast, Dr Papailias was philosophical about the outcome of the referendum.
"I believe those EU nationals who have been paying their taxes in the UK for three years or more have nothing to fear," he said.
"I arrived in Greece today and many of the headlines here were expressing fear about the Greek tourist industry and how Brexit will damage it.
"Of course, uncertainty brings turmoil to financial markets, but I believe that, with the right people making responsible decisions from here on in, things will settle down.
"Things may not change as radically as many believe.
"If there are no further referendums - in Scotland for example, or a border poll in Northern Ireland - things should stabilise in the long-term."
French marketing account executive Natalie Trinh said she would consider moving to the Republic of Ireland in the wake of the result.
"It's such a shame," she said. "We just don't know what to expect now, my friends are worried as everything is up in the air.
"I would consider moving to the south for my career if I had no choice but I'm happy here - this is where I feel settled.
"I can apply for UK citizenship next year as I've been here four years, but for those who can't, it's difficult."
Spanish dentist Jokin Egana, who lives and works in Belfast, said the result was a huge disappointment, but not a surprise.
"Unfortunately, I felt an element of xenophobia confused the campaign - to me, it seemed to appeal to racist sentiments by implying that foreigners are all on benefits.
"The foreign nationals I have met in Northern Ireland are extremely hard workers who contribute to the economy and pay their taxes.
"I felt very offended when the Leave campaign tried to suggest that we were a drain on the economy."
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It was a day of mixed emotions for EU nationals living in Northern Ireland.
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Armed officers surrounded the Gurdwara Temple in Leamington Spa after reports men entered the building in a row over inter-faith marriages.
The Sikh Federation pressure group said the Sikh community had concluded Warwickshire Police had "overreacted".
Officers "assessed the situation and responded accordingly," the force said.
Read more news for Coventry and Warwickshire
A statement from Sikh Youth UK said its members were peacefully protesting against an inter-faith marriage that was to be carried out as a Sikh marriage at the temple.
People were arrested on suspicion of aggravated trespass and a "significant number of bladed weapons" were seized, Warwickshire police said.
The force later confirmed the majority of these were Kirpans - one of the five physical symbols of faith worn by Sikhs.
A Warwickshire Police spokesman said it responded to a report a group of masked men, initially thought to be about 20, who had forced their way into the temple.
He said: "These were reported to be carrying a range of bladed items, some of which were initially described as not being for ceremonial use.
"Blades seized so far have been ceremonial. Another non-ceremonial weapon was seized."
He said police would be investigating the initial claim that other weapons were involved.
Last year a resolution saying inter-faith couples could not have a Sikh marriage in Gurdwareh was approved at meeting called by the Sikh Council UK and represented by 300 Sikh organisations, Sikh Youth UK said.
Sunday's protest was an example of a "rogue Gurdwara committee creating discord among the UK Sikh diaspora" and it described the committee's behaviour as "inexcusable".
The Sikh Federation is a non-governmental organisation set up to promote the Sikh religion, philosophy and way of life.
"Most" of those arrested had been released on bail, but some were still being questioned, police said.
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All but one of the "bladed weapons" seized after 55 people were arrested at a protest at a Sikh temple were ceremonial, police said.
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Under the maximum scenario, up to 2,880 wells could be drilled for oil or gas in a new licensing round, the report says, generating 16,000 to 32,000 jobs.
This would markedly increase lorry movements and could squeeze water supplies for local communities.
But the environmental impact would be "manageable", say consultants AMEC.
A single well might create up to 51 daily lorry movements, AMEC says, but laws and systems already in place would be enough to absorb the environmental upheaval.
The report, commissioned by the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), shows that 100,000 sq km of land is available for drilling.
Under the most optimistic scenario, domestic shale gas production could total 4.32-to-8.64 trillion cubic feet of gas throughout the lifetime of a well - around 20 years.
That is enough to fulfil a quarter of the UK’s annual demand.
It says greenhouse gases during the exploration phase could be up to 0.96 million tonnes of CO2 – totalling just over 15% of the UK’s emissions from all oil and gas production.
Home-grown gas would have lower emissions than imported liquefied gas, the report maintains.
The authors admit there are still large uncertainties in this area, with the academic debate unresolved over the total emissions from fracking activities, including methane leakage when the earth is fracked.
They envisage that the sharpest environmental issues will be at the local level. The availability of water and the need for trucking are both expected to cause local controversy, especially in quiet country areas with narrow roads.
Fracking – a process that involves splitting shale rocks deep underground - uses huge amounts of water, and in some places this would need to be shipped in by tanker.
Around 75% of water used for fracking flows back, and the Environment Agency wants it re-used for further fracking, with the addition of extra water.
But it is expected that in some places waste water will need to be removed from site by lorry, and the report’s authors say this could put a strain on local water treatment.
The energy minister Michael Fallon said residents’ objections would be dealt with at the local level by the planning system and water issues dealt with by the Environment Agency.
He said: “We have a robust system of regulations and, provided companies have gone through due process, the map shows there is a huge amount of shale gas. What’s important for public confidence is to show the system is robust."
He declined to answer whether he would be happy with fracking taking place under his own home.
The figures in the report are based on conjecture because it's not known how readily the rocks in the UK can be fracked to release their gas.
The report envisages that at the lowest scenario there would be just 180-to-360 wells, with 2,500-to-5,000 jobs created. The authors admitted that the number of jobs for local people on the average site might total just 17%.
Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin
Correction: This story was updated on 19 December 2013 to make it clear that the report says it is possible that a single well could create 51 lorry movements every day.
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More than half of the UK could be suitable for shale gas fracking, according to a government-commissioned report.
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A study of 3,000 patients found that chest compressions alone increased chances of survival by more than 22%.
But training in how to give both chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth breaths is the best option, experts say.
The UK Resuscitation Council is due to produce new CPR guidelines next week.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a combination of chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth breaths, given in the event of a cardiac arrest.
The study, compiled by doctors from the Medical University of Vienna in Austria, looked at the survival rates of people treated by untrained members of the public taking instructions from the emergency services over the phone.
Dr Peter Nagele, from the department of anaesthesiology, critical care and pain therapy at the Medical University of Vienna, said that if untrained bystanders avoided mouth-to-mouth breaths during CPR, they were more likely to perform uninterrupted chest compressions.
That then increased the probability of CPR being successful.
The research in The Lancet involved two analyses.
The first used data from three randomised trials involving more than 3,000 patients.
It showed that chest-compression-only CPR was associated with a slightly improved chance of survival compared with standard CPR (14% v 12%).
In the second analysis of seven observational studies, researchers found no difference between the two CPR techniques.
The study authors maintain that continuous, uninterrupted chest compressions are vital for successful CPR.
Dr Jas Soar, chair of the Resuscitation Council from Southmead Hospital in Bristol, said: "Any CPR is better than no CPR. If you witness a cardiac arrest, dial 999 immediately. Those trained in CPR should follow existing guidance of 30 chest compressions followed by two rescue breaths.
"Those not trained should start compressions and follow instructions until an expert arrives," Dr Soar said.
Dr Meng Aw-Yong, medical adviser at St John Ambulance, acknowledged that rescue breaths could be off-putting.
"The current advice is that if you're unwilling or unable to do full CPR then chest compressions are better than nothing.
"The best solution, however, is for people to get trained in how to carry out chest compressions and rescue breaths so they can be the difference between a life lost and a life saved," he said.
The British Heart Foundation says that being able to do CPR more than doubles the chances of survival.
Claire O'Neill, community resuscitation programme lead at the BHF, said: "For someone who is untrained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, doing both chest compressions and rescue breaths really can be difficult.
"We also know that uninterrupted chest compressions are very important for increasing the chance of survival. So being directed to focus solely on chest compressions could make people more willing to attempt resuscitation, which could ultimately save lives," she said.
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Concentrating on chest compressions rather than mouth-to-mouth when giving emergency resuscitation can produce better results, says research published in The Lancet.
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Cradling her baby son, Benjamin, Joy Abuh stares intently when she talks about the moment her life changed forever.
"The herdsmen shot my husband as he was riding his motorbike," she told me matter-of-factly. "They then used a machete to hack him to death."
She says his body was found in the bush several days later.
It was so badly decomposed that villagers buried it before Mrs Abuh had the chance to see her husband for the last time.
Locals in Agatu district in Nigeria's central Benue state say Fulani herdsmen killed dozens of people during a string of attacks this spring.
Many homes were set on fire and reduced to piles of bricks.
Some of the villagers are still recovering from their injuries: I saw one man hobbling along on crutches as a result of a gunshot wound.
The attack in Agatu was one of the most serious in Nigeria this year.
These types of clashes between herdsmen and farmers are increasingly common in some parts of the country as the struggle over grazing rights and access to water becomes more acute.
The violence is largely blamed on Fulani herdsmen, a semi-nomadic group who roam areas in West and Central Africa.
During the dry season in Nigeria, herdsmen begin the long migration from the northern states to the country's central region in search of grazing pastures for their cattle.
It is a journey the herdsmen, often young boys, have been making for centuries.
Following well-established routes, they often return to the same areas.
But land that was once unclaimed and, therefore, free to graze on is now being farmed, frequently triggering clashes.
Hundreds of people have been killed in the violence in 2016.
Nigeria's Fulani herdsmen
Farmers accuse the Fulani of failing to control their cattle and of damaging crops. In turn, the Fulani accuse farmers of stealing their cattle.
The Fulani insist they are only trying to defend themselves and preserve their traditional way of life.
"In the past you graze anywhere, you didn't come into contact with farms. But now you're forced to herd cattle along the road," says Isa Mosham Sarkin, a local Fulani leader in neighbouring Nasarawa state.
"People are saying that Fulani are a threat to the nation. But we're not the ones causing the problems - it is some farmers."
Some observers fear that unless the issues are addressed the clashes could become more violent.
Growing insecurity and the effects of climate change are making a bad situation even worse, says Israel Okpe, from Pastoral Resolve, an organisation that promotes conflict resolution between farmers and the Fulani.
"Both sides are becoming more armed, they are preparing for anything," says Mr Okpe.
"We don't know where the weapons are coming from but they are sophisticated."
Behind the competition for land:
The violence is also playing into the country's politics, which frequently breaks down along ethnic lines.
President Muhammadu Buhari, a Fulani, has been accused of turning a blind eye to the problem, sparking a public outcry.
In response, the government ordered security forces to crack down on cattle rustlers.
The government is also discussing plans to station security guards on farms and open up special cattle ranches where the herdsmen's cattle would be allowed to graze.
But critics say that will mean forcing farmers to give up land they already control, sparking further resistance.
For rice farmer, Rotimi Williams, there is only one solution: Farmers and the Fulani will need to find a way to share the land.
When 20 hectares (49 acres) of his rice paddies were ruined in February, he admits he was furious.
Some of his labourers were ready to take up arms. But he decided on a different approach.
Instead of lashing out, he hired the Fulani herdsman who caused the damage to provide security.
He then employed dozens of women from the nearby Fulani village to work in the fields.
"We need a pragmatic approach where we learn to resolve conflicts with our neighbours," he says.
"The situation is spinning out of control. Everyone is scared of herdsmen. But if you give them respect then you get respect in turn."
Respect and resolutions, however, are rare on the ground between farmers and the herdsmen.
And with the demand for land growing the violence may only intensify.
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Farms have been built on ancient routes of a semi-nomadic community in Nigeria, causing violence that has already claimed hundreds of lives this year.
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Ansari has a glittering academic record and said his decision would only have been a negative act if he had had the talent to be one of the very best.
"In my own mind at least I was not, or have not been, a super successful cricketer, it did not feel like I was giving up something," he said.
"If I was Joe Root or Moeen Ali, I would have been giving up."
Ansari has a double first in politics, philosophy and sociology from Cambridge University, and a master's in history from Royal Holloway, and his academic credentials "massively played a part" in his choice.
He added that the "so-called bravery of the decision, or whatever people thought, probably was not as great as it might have come across".
Asked if he stopped loving the game, Ansari told BBC Radio 5 live: "Yeah, a lot of cricketers fight with the game."
Ansari played three Test matches in 2016 and 71 first-class games overall, taking a total of 133 wickets.
He had been at Surrey since the age of eight and made his international debut last year against Bangladesh, before playing two further Test matches against India.
But at the time he admitted the tour of the subcontinent had come too early for him, having managed just five wickets at an average of 55 and scoring 49 runs.
"It is a hard sport in terms of the amount that you fail and in terms of the amount you travel a lot of the time," he explained.
"It really does take up your life in a way that a lot of sports do. When you are really interested in other things, and when there are people around you that do other things that you see and excite you, that really was the impetus to me."
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Former England and Surrey all-rounder Zafar Ansari insists he was not "giving up" when he retired at the age of 25.
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Planning for a women's team could start after the men's team's place in World Rugby's post-2019 global calendar is fixed.
Tours to New Zealand and Canada, first and third in the world, could form the basis for a women's team's itinerary.
"A Lions women's team is an important step forward," said McEwen.
"There is a place for a women's Lions team, lots of people have been talking about it.
"Whether that's in the next two or three years, whether that's in five, 10 years, who knows?"
New Zealand's women will play world champions England in a curtain-raiser to the Lions' match against the Maori All Blacks in Rotorua on 17 June.
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A women's version of the British and Irish Lions could be launched some time after 2019, according to the team's chief operating officer Charlie McEwan.
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The match saw Royal Kituro run in 56 tries and 38 conversions to Soignies' lone drop-goal - which equates to more than four points a minute on average.
The problems began for Soignies in the run-up to the game when the referee failed to turn up on time.
The away team's coach and most of the players then left, assuming the game was off.
However the referee did eventually appear, more than an hour after the scheduled kick-off, and the game went ahead.
The 16 Soignies players still available seemingly did not compete in protest.
Soignies president Guy Calomme described the result as "catastrophic", while a Kituro spokeswoman said Soignies "didn't really play".
Footage of the game shows the away team allowing the opposition to run past them uncontested and repeatedly touch down under the posts.
The away team were effectively forced to play and gain the 'loser's point', rather than forfeit the match and earn no points at all.
And despite Royal Kituro's hammering of Soignies, the losers still sit above the Kituro in the league by one point.
Soignies occupy third place in the table, although they now have a points difference of minus 264.
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A Belgian rugby team playing in the country's top division has won a game 356-3.
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Helen Garner initially dismissed the message from Yale University as a hoax.
"I thought what the hell is this? Somebody's having me on," Ms Garner told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
She was going to delete the email but thought to call her publisher, who informed her that the Windham-Campbell prize was in fact real.
The Windham-Campbell prize is one of world's richest literary awards, according to reports.
Garner, 73, won for her body of non-fiction work. She is also the author of novels and screenplays, including 1977's Monkey Grip, considered a classic of Australian literature.
She was not the only author to be taken aback by the surprise award, because the prizes have no submission process.
"Writers are judged anonymously and unaware that they are in the running," Yale says on its website.
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An Australian author says she "fell off her chair" when she discovered an email about a $150,000 (A$207,000; £106,000) literary award was not a hoax.
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The total of £39m spent was up on the £34.4m spent in 2010 - but was still down on the record £42m spent in 2005.
The Lib Dems spent £3.5m, the UK Independence Party £2.8m, the Scottish National Party £1.5m and Greens £1.1m.
The UK Independence Party spent the least per vote gained - the Scottish National Party spent least per MP won.
In the 2015 general election the Conservatives had 331 MPs elected, Labour 232, the SNP 56, and the Lib Dems 8.
UKIP had one MP elected despite winning 12.6% of all votes cast. The Greens had one MP elected and won 3.7% of votes.
Although comfortably outspending Labour over the regulated period - between 23 May 2014 and 7 May 2015 - the Conservatives spent less than in 2010, when their budget was £16.6m. In contrast, Labour spent more than in 2010, when their total outlay was £8m.
A breakdown of the figures show the Conservatives spent 27.7% of their budget on "unsolicited material", such as flyers, and 23.2% on advertising while Labour spent 61% of their budget on "unsolicited material" and 7.6% on advertising.
Unsolicited material: £15.04m
Market research and canvassing: £7.61m
Advertising: £6.86m
Rallies and other events: £2.49m
Overheads and general admin: £2.02m
Transport: £1.67m
Campaign broadcasts: £866,000
Media: £329,713
Manifestos: £318,880
Source: Electoral Commission
Spending on rallies accounted for 13% of Labour's total expenditure compared with the Conservatives' 5% while the Conservatives spent 30.1% of their budget on market research and canvassing against Labour's 7.7% outlay.
The Conservatives spent £1.2m on advertising on Facebook in the year before the poll while Labour spent just over £16,000.
The figures do not cover some administrative spending, for instance on staff, while spending by individual candidates is reported separately.
The SNP reported the biggest rise in spending compared with 2010, when their expenditure totalled £316,000. In contrast, the Lib Dems' spending fell from £4.7m in 2010 to £3.5m last year.
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The Conservatives were the biggest spenders on the 2015 General Election - spending £15.5m to Labour's £12m, the Electoral Commission says.
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Gina Miller told the BBC they had "exacerbated" worries during and after the EU vote and failed to defend her and others with "legitimate concerns" about the process in the face of abuse.
She insists she did not bring her case to thwart the UK's exit from the EU.
But she said some politicians were in "la la land" about what lay in store.
The investment manager was speaking to the BBC's political editor Laura Kuenssberg after the Supreme Court upheld her challenge to the government's approach.
By a margin of eight to three, the justices ruled that Parliament must give its consent before Theresa May can start official talks on the terms of the UK's exit.
Ministers say it was right for the court to decide and they will comply with the ruling.
Mrs Miller, who voted to remain in the EU, said she felt vindicated but that her goal all along had been to give a voice to the millions of people with a stake in the process and help deliver "the best Brexit we can get".
"This is about right and wrong, it's wrong that a government think they are above the law. It's right that I can bring this case," she said.
The 51-year old, who was born in Guyana but educated in Britain, suggested the EU referendum had created a climate of fear in which anyone asking questions about Brexit was seen as unpatriotic and "branded as traitors".
"There's this sense that if you ask a question about Brexit then you're not representing Britain," she said. "Asking questions about Brexit is the most patriotic thing you can do."
She added: "People voted because of legitimate concerns. Politicians have behaved despicably because they have exacerbated those anxieties."
Asked if Theresa May and her ministers had behaved "despicably", Ms Miller said it was "wrong of them not to stand up earlier when the judges were being vilified".
"I think it was wrong of them to not actually speak up sooner about abuse for not just myself but for other people who live in the UK."
Mrs Miller, who says she has been subjected to constant abuse including death threats, said she felt her "family and safety have been put in jeopardy".
"The idea that as a woman I had no right to speak out and I'm not bright enough to speak out. And as an ethnic woman I have no place in society. That's worrying."
She said she was still concerned that politicians were "twisting the truth" when it came to the UK's future outside the EU and Mrs May and her ministers needed to "be honest" with the public about what was achievable from the negotiations.
"Even now, some of the things I hear about what is possible, as we progress Brexit, it's as though they are living in some sort of la la land because it's pure fantasy."
She added: "There are 27 other member states on the other side of the table who are not just going to give us what we want. They are not going to give us cherry picking".
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The woman who brought the successful legal challenge against the government over Brexit has accused prominent politicians of behaving "despicably".
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Jonny Benjamin, 26, was on Waterloo Bridge in January 2008 after being diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder when Neil Laybourn intervened.
This month Mr Benjamin started a Twitter campaign using the hashtag #findmike, to trace his Good Samaritan.
Mr Laybourn said that when he saw the tweet he knew it referred to him.
The pair were reunited on Tuesday.
Mr Benjamin had climbed up on to a ledge on the bridge after spending a month in hospital following his diagnosis, but Mr Laybourn talked to him and offered to buy him a coffee.
The 31-year-old from Surrey, said: "It was a very cold day, a very windy day, and Jonny just had a T-shirt on and was sitting over the edge of the bridge and it was glaringly obvious why he was there.
"I walked up around him and just calmly approached him and I said: 'Hi mate, can you tell me why you're sitting on the bridge?' and he told me that he was going to take his life that day.
"We just went from there, I just kept asking him questions and wanted to engage him and that if he wanted to talk I was there," Mr Laybourn added.
Mr Benjamin said he had gone to the bridge after feeling his life had hit "rock bottom".
He told BBC Radio 5 live Breakfast: "All I remember was standing on the edge of the bridge and this guy just coming up to me out of nowhere.
"The pivotal moment for me was when he said 'you can get through this, you can get better' because up until that point no-one had said it would get better."
Mr Laybourn said that he offered to take Jonny for a coffee to talk things through but that never happened.
Mr Benjamin said: "They [police] took me away and I never got a chance to say thank you to Neil which is why I launched this campaign - we never got a chance to go for that coffee and I've just been so grateful to him ever since."
The #findmike Twitter campaign trended in countries including Canada, South Africa and Australia, but it was Mr Laybourn's fiancée who saw the campaign tweet.
He said: "She saw it on her phone a couple of days after it had gone viral, and straightaway she called me up and as soon as I looked at it I saw how big it was, so I just got in touch as soon as I could really.
"It was incredible [meeting Jonny], really nice, very emotional for both of us and really nice to have a conclusion to it and to hear Johnny's side of things that day."
Mr Benjamin said meeting Mr Laybourn had made him feel "elated".
He said: "When I went to the bridge I was so embarrassed about what I was going through, I couldn't tell anyone, but that simple act of telling Neil and having him listen made all the difference."
Mr Benjamin, a video blogger who has presented a BBC Three documentary on mental illness, is also making a documentary film about his search for his Good Samaritan which he hopes will be broadcast in the spring.
Schizoaffective disorder affects about 1 in 200 people and those suffering have very high or very low moods, and might lose touch with reality, the charity Rethink Mental Illness said.
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A video blogger who was stopped by a stranger from jumping into the River Thames has been reunited with the man who saved him six years ago.
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Media playback is unsupported on your device
15 August 2015 Last updated at 12:55 BST
Elephant tusks are made of ivory which is very valuable and is sold illegally for thousands of pounds.
It is used to make trinkets and even medicine in some other countries.
Ayshah has more.
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This is Simotua, the baby elephant was rescued after being caught in a trap set by poachers in Africa.
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Alongside Labour's Harriet Harman, Lib Dem leader Tim Farron and the Greens' Natalie Bennett, he accused the Leave campaign of being "reckless" over the economic case for quitting the EU.
His comments come as senior Tories trade blows over the 23 June poll.
Vote Leave said it had "set out a series of pledges about how life will be better if we take back control".
It said the pro-Remain politicians' speeches were "desperate stuff from an increasingly desperate campaign".
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn - who is also backing a vote to stay in the EU - has refused to share a platform with Mr Cameron, so former deputy leader Ms Harman joined the other party leaders at the event in London.
She said she was "fearful" that workers' rights would not be protected if the UK votes to leave, and said the government, not the EU, should be blamed for pressures on the NHS and housing supply.
How trade and the UK's economy are affected by membership of the EU.
Ms Bennett cited environmental protections she said were the result of EU action and Mr Farron said the "pretty unlikely show of cross-party unity" showed the strength of feeling against "made-up" spending pledges being made by the rival side.
In his speech, the PM repeated his warning of a "decade of uncertainty" if Britain leaves the EU and accused the Leave side of "sticking pins on a map" over how a future trade arrangement would work.
He said the rival campaign, being spearheaded by Boris Johnson and Michael Gove, was "playing with people's jobs" and trying to "dodge questions", accusing them of playing an "economic con trick on the British people".
At a Vote Leave campaign event, Mr Johnson said the benefits of being in the EU single market had been "wildly overstated" saying: "The vision for taking this country forward is about taking back control."
He said the UK could gain from free trade deals with China and the United States but that the UK could not do this as an EU member because such deals were controlled by the European Commission.
"It is a delusion to think we can somehow gain greater prosperity by bartering away our freedom and our democracy," he said, challenging the Remain side to spell out how they would tackle pressure on the NHS and housing caused by rising immigration.
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David Cameron joined up with political rivals as he claimed an EU exit would put "a bomb under our economy".
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Sgt Hugh Barry was among officers called to Deborah Danner's New York apartment on Tuesday evening to reports of an "emotionally disturbed person".
He persuaded her to drop a pair of scissors, but shot her twice after she tried to hit him with a baseball bat.
The killing has sparked outrage - not just because of the 66-year-old's race, but also her fragile mental state.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Wednesday she "should be alive right now", while NYPD Commissioner James O'Neil said his department had "failed".
"It's not how we train; our first obligation is to preserve life, not to take a life when it can be avoided," he said.
New York City police respond to 128,000 calls about emotionally disturbed people each year, and are supposed to use techniques to "de-escalate" a situation, rather than resort to force.
They had already come to Ms Danner's apartment on a number of occasions, each time taking her to hospital.
It is not known why Sgt Barry, who had been an officer for eight years and was equipped with a stun gun, did not follow his training.
But Ed Mullins, the head of the police union representing sergeants, argued the shooting was self defence - and Sgt Barry was being used as a political pawn.
"They're taking the weak political spot and blaming the sergeant for everything," Mullins said. "I'm not surprised. [Mr de Blasio is] up for election next year."
Police shootings have come to the fore in the US in recent years, with the black community suffering disproportionately.
In 2015, US police officers killed 346 black people, according to Mapping Police Violence.
Anger over the shootings started the Black Lives Matter campaign.
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A US police officer has been stripped of his gun and badge after he shot a mentally ill black pensioner dead.
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How do those sports work? How did the superstars get started and how can you have a go yourself?
With expert analysis, rules, history, ones to watch and an explanation of each sport's unique appeal, BBC Sport provides comprehensive guides alongside details of how to try them out.
You're going to get such excitement - archery is very fast-paced
Want to know how to hit something the size of a beermat from a distance of seven bus-lengths? This is the place.
Meet the GB archer heading to her sixth Olympics, discover which Asian nation dominates the sport, and use Archery GB's club finder to work out where you can pick up a bow for the first time.
ARCHERY: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Team GB's athletes are set for their best Olympics ever
Did you know? Marathon runners burn up almost twice the average person's daily calorie allowance in one race.
Now, you may not want to take things to that extreme, but UK Athletics has a 'Grassroots' scheme to get new athletes, coaches, officials and volunteers into the sport. Here, find out where to find one near you, plus the equipment you'll need and the history of Olympic athletics.
ATHLETICS: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Badminton players are super-fit, super-fast and have super reactions
Not many sports hit speeds of up to 200mph - but badminton does. Or the shuttlecock, at least.
It'll take you a while to hit it that fast but if you want to learn, there are more than 2,200 clubs in the UK. Use our guide to find one near you plus find out where Britain's medal hopes might lie at London 2012.
BADMINTON: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Basketball has the most well-rounded athletes in the world
More than 300,000 people play basketball each month in Britain. If you're at school, the 'Try Basketball' scheme can get you involved - if you're over 25, 'Ball Again' is the scheme for you.
Get all the details you need to play basketball here, as well as John Amaechi's expert verdict on London 2012 and Britain's basketball hopes.
BASKETBALL: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Watch for 10 minutes and you'll realise how incredible these athletes are
Hang on, how many tonnes of sand? Immerse yourself in the summery sport of beach volleyball here. And yes, even in blustery Britain, taster sessions are available.
Head here for more information on how the 'Go Spike' campaign can get you involved, as well as our guide to the basics ahead of the London 2012 competition on Horse Guards Parade.
BEACH VOLLEYBALL: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Only GB and Russia have the full quota of three women boxers
Don't try this at home. Instead, try it at your local club - where you'll the right equipment and vital supervision as you develop the physical and mental discipline needed in boxing.
Our guide has full details of clubs in the UK as well as an explanation of the weight divisions at the Games, a look at how scoring works in amateur boxing, and BBC experts' predictions for Team GB.
BOXING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
In canoe slalom, something is always on the edge of going wrong
You could fill 75 bath tubs per second with the water coursing down the Lee Valley slalom course. So it's probably an idea to start somewhere else.
Happily, there are clubs all over the UK with equipment you can borrow and slightly calmer waters on hand. Our guide has all the details plus all the rules of slalom canoeing - like gates and penalties - explained.
CANOE SLALOM: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Team GB are expected to win a couple of medals here
Head down and paddle as fast as you possibly can - over 200m, 500m or a full kilometre. But beginners can find it tricky enough just getting in the boat without capsizing.
Help is at hand. Our guide covers place to start paddling in the UK, plus we explain the various classes of Olympic sprint canoe racing and rate British hopes at London 2012.
CANOE SPRINT: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
BMX is a fast-paced sport that is made for television
Bumps and berms abound in Britain. There are more than 50 BMX tracks in the UK to choose from if you fancy yourself the new Shanaze Reade.
Our guide tells you where to find them all, what the sport's about, who the Olympic favourites are and how the rules shape the event at London 2012. Maybe skip the part about the broken collarbone if you're just about to start out.
BMX: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Czech star Jaroslav Kulhavy is a huge man but he seems to defy physics
There are four types of mountain bike race - cross-country, the Olympic one, is probably a good place to start. Downhill can be something to aim at for later. Helmet, knee pads and so on? Essential.
British Cycling offers various ways into MTB and we've got them covered in our guide. We also take a look at the top British riders and explain the rules of Olympic cross-country mountain biking ahead of the Games.
All British hopes will be pinned on super-sprinter Mark Cavendish
Britain's roads reverberate like never before with the whirring wheels of weekend warriors on their road bikes. Fancy joining them? We'll explain how initiatives like Sky Ride can help out. You don't have to compete - simply going for a ride counts.
However, there's a lot more at stake this summer for the best British road cycling team in generations, if not ever. Our guide picks apart the rules and riders for the London 2012 road races and time trials.
Young British star Laura Trott will win the hearts of the crowd
After the Olympics there will be a shiny, new velodrome waiting for you. But what skills do you need? Why stay indoors instead of pedalling out on the open road? And doesn't always going left get boring?
Our guide answers these questions and can help you find a track near you. British hopes are high for more track cycling success this summer, so we also preview the London 2012 track cycling programme.
Divers look like they are performing magic with their twists and turns
Diving tones a wide variety of muscles, engaging the lower body, back, shoulders, abdominals and arm muscles. Don't underestimate this sport - as you get better, it becomes a full-body workout.
Don't underestimate the best of British, either. Tom Daley is a household name but our guide introduces you to a few more Team GB names as well as ways to start out in the sport in the UK.
DIVING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Watch out for Charlotte Dujardin, who is a young talent in dressage
Riding a horse is probably less expensive and tricky than you think. Lessons are available all over the country and our guide tells you where to try the sport for the first time.
This is actually three sports in one: eventing, dressage and jumping. We explain which is which, how the skills you need differ between the three, and what to expect in each at London 2012.
EQUESTRIAN: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Who doesn't want to watch two people fighting with swords?
Fencing is a sport that will tone muscles, build core strength and reward agility and all-round fitness. There are 300 or so clubs in the UK waiting to hear from you, while even toddlers can get involved using foam swords.
Our guide has all those details as well as an overview of the three types of fencing at the Olympics - epee, foil and sabre - and some suggestions for names to watch.
FENCING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
For Britain's women, the Olympics are as big as the World Cup
There are all kinds of ways to start playing football in Britain. To help you on the way, our guide has links to all the right places to find advice and locations near you.
Olympic football can also be confusing - there are unique rules about age in the men's game and this is the one place you will find a GB football team, so we explain more about that and pick some teams to watch at the Games.
Hardly anyone has the skill to pull off the feats you will see at the Games
Bad news. You can't get a perfect 10 any more - that scoring system faded some time ago - but it turns out 16.375 is the new 10.0, so you'll just have to aim for that when you sign up at one of the 1,600-plus gymnastics clubs in the UK.
Our guide gives you all the links you need to make a start, as well as explaining how anyone gets to a score of 16.375 (or higher) and who from Team GB might do just that this summer.
ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Gymnasts have to be supple, strong and possess wonderful hand-eye coordination
Ribbons, hoops, clubs and balls are the tools of this trade - plus flexibility, agility and, of course, rhythm.
Our guide explains how to try rhythmic gymnastics for yourself as well as explaining what to look out for when you watch the Olympic group and individual finals. What are the rules? How is it scored? And what are the hopes of the British team at London 2012?
RHYTHMIC GYMNASTICS: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
The margin for error is so slim - one small movement can finish you
Most people have had a go on a trampoline, but moves at the top level are astonishingly complex - not to mention lasers measuring how long you spend in the air, to the millisecond, all of which counts towards your score.
If you want to get bouncing then our guide will put you in the picture, while explaining what happens in an Olympic trampoline final and picking the protagonists who may have a spring in their step this summer.
TRAMPOLINE: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
The Olympics is a unique opportunity for people in Britain to see handball
Handball never used to be big at all in Britain, but with a home Games that is changing. There are nearly 100 clubs to join across the UK and our guide will help you find the one nearest to you.
But how do you play? Is it more like basketball or football? And how come Iceland are so good at it? We explain all that and more, plus we introduce the British teams for London 2012.
HANDBALL: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
More goals are being scored and skill levels are massively improved
Want to try hockey? Now could be the right moment, with the two GB sides looking the strongest they have in years. England Hockey and the home nations' other governing bodies run programmes like Hockey Nation to get newcomers involved.
Our guide provides useful links to those projects as well as looking at the rule changes designed to speed up the game at London 2012, and the main contenders for gold.
In judo, technique can and does often overcome power
Don't get in the way of Teddy Riner. France's 6ft 8in heavyweight judo star has five world titles to his name and looks to be a certainty for Olympic gold at London 2012.
With a bit of luck, he won't turn up to your judo taster session. Our guide tells you where to find a club near you, explains the rules of the Olympic event (including the categories) and looks at Britain's brightest hopes.
JUDO: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
In one day, pentathletes will use some of London 2012's most iconic venues
Swimming and running is a good place to start here. Then try your hand at shooting. After that, you only need to acquaint yourself with showjumping and fencing, and you're a modern pentathlete.
This is a sport with plenty of nuances and some important rule changes for London 2012 - involving laser guns, primarily, so you'll want to read on. Our guide explains the sport, it's history, and where to find out more.
MODERN PENTATHLON: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
You are going to get medals galore if you tune into the rowing
Sir Steve Redgrave and Sir Matthew Pinsent helped to establish Britain at the top of global rowing, but there's nothing to stop the rest of us going for a weekend outing on the UK's rivers.
Our guide explains the different rowing boat classes, links to more useful information on getting started, and asks whether Team GB can maintain its fine medal record in the sport this summer.
ROWING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
This is one of the most challenging ways you can win an Olympic medal
Britain is a sailing nation and the Olympic sport takes in everything from dinghies to windsurfers (and, from Rio 2016, kiteboarding).
We explain the different regattas of the Games in our guide, alongside a full preview of leading British names - like three-time Olympic champion Ben Ainslie - and ways to get started in the sport.
SAILING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
The level of concentration among the top shooters is extraordinary
Keep an eye on double trap shooting at this year's Games for the best chance of British success. And if you're looking to try the sport yourself, our guide includes links to introductory courses where you'll get to experience the different weapons and learn basic safety.
We also go through the Olympic events and explain a scoring system that, unusually, goes up to 10.9.
SHOOTING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
I think there should be a British woman in every final except the breaststroke
Wil Rebecca Adlington win gold again? Who will come out on top between Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte? And is there a swimming pool nearby?
All valid questions and our guide can help with each, boasting details of various British Swimming programmes alongside analysis of this summer's main event at London 2012 and the top Britons hoping to win medals.
SWIMMING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
The athletes train so hard, putting in 10-hour days at least five days a week
Nowhere else in the Olympic Games is being able to hold your breath such a valuable skill. Synchro may look dainty and balletic, but you need considerable fitness levels and coordination to succeed.
Find out where to get started with our guide, plus get the lowdown on the most likely candidates for Olympic gold in one of only two sports at the Games limited to female participants (the other being rhythmic gymnastics).
SYNCHRONISED SWIMMING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
China should sweep the medals, but their athletes can crack under pressure
Millions of people play table tennis in Britain. Our guide will also tell you it's a favoured sport of Susan Sarandon, George Clooney and Bill Gates, but - more importantly - we have all the information you need to start playing.
At the Olympics, table tennis is dominated by China. We also take a look at the sport's Olympic history and the prospects of a six-strong Britsih contingent this summer.
TABLE TENNIS: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Taekwondo is easy to understand. It's two people trying to kick each other
Britain's four-strong team - excluding the world number one in his category, Aaron Cook, you will recall - has a good chance of medals at London 2012.
But how do you win those medals? How is taekwondo scored, why are kicks to the head so important, and how has technology in the sport developed? Plus, how do you get started in the sport? Our guide has all the answers.
You are going to see tennis in a different light, passion from the word go
Just weeks after Wimbledon, tennis is back on the same grass courts for the Olympic Games - as are some of the biggest names in the sport, not least Britain's own beaten Wimbledon finalist Andy Murray.
Did you know that there are more than 500 venues across the UK where you can play tennis for free? Our guide has all those details as well as a run-down of the Olympic tennis tournament and ones to watch.
TENNIS: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Jessica Ennis gets a break in the heptathlon - these guys don't
Britain's Brownlee brothers are hot favourites for a one-two in this summer's Olympic men's triathlon. They started out by fell-running in Yorkshire but there are plenty of other ways to get into this sport of swimming, cycling and running.
Our guide outlines how to start out in triathlon, provides some background on the Brownlees and sizes up their opponents inside Hyde Park at London 2012.
TRIATHLON: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Four years ago, China's women attracted TV audiences of 370 million
This sport was supposedly devised as a gentler alternative to basketball - tell that to the teams at the Olympics. And then find out for yourself by taking part in the Go Spike campaign and getting involved in the game.
Our guide has the details you need to sign up plus more background on the sport, an asssessment of Team GB's hopes at London 2012 and a look at ones to watch from other nations.
VOLLEYBALL: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
Anything goes under the water as players gain whatever advantage they can
Great Britain won four of the first five Olympic water polo tournaments. That, it seems, was apparently enough as no GB team has qualified for any Games since 1956. This summer, both GB's men and women will compete as the host nation.
Water polo is a tough sport, requiring endurance and physicality. Read our guide to get started and find out more about the sport at London 2012.
WATER POLO: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
The technique and strength on show from the athletes is phenomenal
Teenage British weightlifter Zoe Smith has proved you don't have to be the size of a house to make a career out of weightlifting - or even a hobby.
If Smith has inspired you, our guide can help you find the nearest of the UK's 50 or so weightlifting clubs. We also explain the sport's basics, look at some of the key names heading to London 2012 and profile the chances of Brits lifting a medal.
WEIGHTLIFTING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
It can be over in a second or last three gruelling two-minute rounds
One famous Olympic wrestling bout lasted an incredible 11 hours - if you fancy having a go, chances are your first try might be over a little sooner. Our guide has all the information you need to help you pick from the 40 wrestling clubs in the UK that can get you going.
Britain has one wrestler at the Games. Meet her in our guide, read up on the rules that separate this from pro wrestling, and size up some of the superstars coming to London for the Games.
WRESTLING: BBC Sport event guide and how to get involved
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The greatest sportsmen and women from around the world are in London, competing in events ranging from archery to wrestling, badminton to volleyball.
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The three helmet-cam clips were released by the Ministry of Defence after a request, led by the BBC on behalf of several other media groups.
Gunfire from an Apache helicopter can be heard in the footage.
Known as Marine A, Blackman was sentenced to life by court martial in 2013, but an appeal is due next week.
Blackman, from Taunton, Somerset, was refused bail in December.
The Court Martial Appeal Court ruled that the full video would not be released.
The released clips, filmed on the headcam of another marine, show Blackman's patrol in Afghanistan as gunfire is unleashed from an Apache helicopter.
Swearing can be heard, as well as someone saying: "They've missed him" and "error, after error, after error".
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Footage showing the moments leading up to the incident in which ex-Royal Marine Sgt Alexander Blackman killed a Taliban fighter has been released.
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